Monday, April 27, 2009

Vilma feeling at home in Big Apple


It’s as if Batangas Gov. Vilma Santos has never left home. While in the New York tri-state area (New York, New Jersey and Connecticut) shooting the Star Cinema movie In My Life, Vilma is with husband, former Senator and now NEDA head Ralph Recto, and children Ryan Christian and Luis Manzano who is also in the cast of the movie directed by Olive Lamasan. Luis plays Vilma’s son having a discreet affair with another man (played by John Lloyd Cruz). Vilma’s character will face a lot of problems after a tragedy happens. Also in the entourage is Vilma’s Girl Friday/accountant Aida Fandialan.

Vilma feels right at home in New York where she has many friends and loyal Vilmanians led by Alan Trambulo who works as assistant manager of the Radisson Hotel located in Manhattan.

“She won’t feel homesick here,” Alan texted Funfare.

Slated for a September release, In My Life is Vilma’s first movie after Regal Films’ Mano Po 3: My Love in 2004 and also her first with Luis and John Lloyd. Asked in an earlier interview if Luis and John Lloyd would have a kissing scene, Vilma said in jest that she would “save” Luis and do the scene herself with John Lloyd. The movie also stars Rafael Rosell, Vice Ganda, Nikki Valdez (based in Canada with her husband) and Tirso Cruz III (who replaced Edu Manzano as Vilma’s husband, a “guest” role).

Shooting in the tri-state will take only three weeks, that’s why the entourage is doing things almost non-stop. Last week in Connecticut, it rained but the shoot at a clothing shop went on. So far, they have shot scenes at the Newark Liberty International Airport in Newark, New Jersey; and at the Statue of Liberty on Liberty Island, New York.

“Ryan Christian is also a hit with the Pinoy fans here,” reported Funfare’s Big Apple correspondent Edmund Silvestre (of The Filipino Reporter). “Mukha daw ‘chickboy’ ang bata, like his dad. And he is matinee-idol material daw.”

A ‘surprise’ bash for Ricky Reyes

Thursday night last week, Marikina City Mayor Marides Fernando and her husband, MMDA Chairman Bayani Fernando, hosted a belated “surprise” party for Ricky Reyes at their residence. Ricky’s birthday is April 12 (which fell on Easter Sunday this year). He came with partner Cris Aquino (who manages TravelPros, his own travel agency).

Among the very few invited guests were Jullie Yap-Daza, Louie Cruz and GMA executives Reggie Magno, Darling de Jesus and Marivin Arayata.

Leny de Jesus (on guitar and vocals) led the original members of the Electromaniacs (but minus Jose Mari) in playing retro songs (Beatles, etc.) and, of course, the band’s classic instrumentals like I Miss You So and Lover’s Guitar.

Mayor Marides sang a few songs and so did Chairman Bayani who was in his Celebrity Duets element.

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Taller Hatton predicts early win against Pacquiao


WASHINGTON - Ricky Hatton is banking on his strength and slight height advantage to help him knock out Filipino Manny Pacquiao early in their mouth-watering light-welterweight title clash in Las Vegas on May 2.

The 5 foot 7 inch Hatton, who has never lost at his natural weight of 140 pounds, is one inch taller than former four-weight world champion Pacquiao.

"I don't see it being a distance fight," Hatton said during a teleconference call on Tuesday. "Manny goes for the knockout, I go for the knockout. It'll be an absolute war.

"Manny isn't the most elusive guy ... and when he gets hit, he will be hit by the strongest man he has ever been in with. I've never been more confident.

"Very rarely do I have an opponent against whom I have a height advantage, albeit a miniscule one, and certainly a strength advantage," added the 30-year-old from Manchester.

"Manny hasn't fought anybody as fiery, as ferocious and certainly as big and strong as Ricky Hatton. Ricky Hatton is a handful."

Hatton , who is widely regarded as the best pound-for-pound fighter in the world.

UNDISPUTED KING

Pacquiao's most recent bout, a stoppage win over Oscar De La Hoya in December, was at welterweight but he has never fought in the 140-pound division where Hatton is the undisputed king.

"He's had one fight about 135 pounds and that was against Oscar," Hatton said. "He's a southpaw, he's got his hand speed and his footwork so I'm aware of the dangers.

"But he should certainly be worried about my power. He has won world titles in different weight divisions but down there."

Hatton will be fighting for the fifth time in Las Vegas, his most recent appearance there resulting in an 11th-round TKO of American Paulie Malignaggi in November to retain his IBO belt.

However, the Nevada desert venue was also the scene of his only defeat -- by Floyd Mayweather Jr in December 2007 -- a bitter loss that prompted him to re-evaluate his career.

"The Mayweather fight taught me I needed to pull my socks up and stop thinking I could walk right through opponents," said 'Hitman' Hatton.

After an unimpressive comeback bout against Juan Lazcano in Manchester, Hatton fired his long-time trainer Billy Graham and turned to the father of his sole conqueror, Floyd Mayweather Sr.

Under Mayweather's guidance, Hatton has rediscovered some of the boxing skills he felt he had lost in recent fights and he believed his stoppage of Malignaggi proved how much he had improved during their short time together.

"That was with just seven weeks of training camp," Hatton said of his November win when he frequently out-jabbed an opponent who had been widely viewed as holding an advantage in hand speed and boxing ability.

"If we did that in seven weeks, with another training camp we're going to be that much better. Everyone thinks I'm just a fat little brawler but there's more to me than that."

Sunday, April 19, 2009

Donaire beats Martinez in TKO


Nonito Donaire beat Raul Martinez today at the Araneta Coliseum.

Donaire, the reigning IBF flyweight champion from Bohol, put the title he sensationally won against Vic Darchinyan in July of 2007 at stake against the Mexican-American who said he didn’t come here to lose. But lost Martinez did as Donaire beat him via a technical knockout in the fourth round.

Donaire and Martinez have faced each other once, during their young, amateur days in the United States. The Filipino won that one on points, but even both fighters have a very vague idea of how it went.

After beating Darchinyan, Donaire knocked out Luis Maldonado in December of 2007, but spent 11 months looking for a fight until he crushed Moruti Mthalane last November for a 20-1-0 record.

Martinez was the busier fighter last year. He fought four times, and won them all, fighting as heavy as 117 lbs, and dropping

Thursday, April 16, 2009

Mar-Korina wedding set!


As you must have noticed, there’s no question mark in today’s headline, just an exclamation point. Yes, it’s definite: Sen. Mar Roxas and Korina Sanchez are getting married before the year is over — yes, very soon!

According to Funfare’s unimpeachable DPA, Mar is being “traditional” with the whole thing, starting with informing the Roxases and the Aranetas about the long-delayed wedding, followed by a pamanhikan with Korina’s siblings (both Korina’s parents are gone) anytime next week.

No date has been set for the wedding which promises to bring together bigwigs from both politics and showbiz, and the business sector as well, since it will, although informally, signal the start of Mar’s march to...MalacaƱang? In fact, he has already taken the initial bold step as shown by the TV plugs showing him driving a tricycle while encouraging the kids to pursue their dreams. Mar is definitely running for President in 2010, with Korina beside him during the grueling campaign.

Yesterday morning, Korina was with the Araneta-Roxas clan during the wreath-laying ceremonies at the tomb of President Manuel Roxas at the North Cemetery, marking his 61st death anniversary. (Roxas was the first president of the independent Republic of the Philippines.)

“It’s Korina’s first time to be seen in public with the clan, although she has been joining the family gatherings,” said the Funfare DPA. “The Aranetas and the Roxases treat Korina as a member of the family. When Mar met the movie press at a post-Christmas party last January at the White House (Bahay na Puti, the Aranetas’ sprawling residence in Cubao, Quezon City), he was joined by his mom, Judy Araneta-Roxas, his sister Ria Roxas-Ojeda, his cousins... and Korina.”

The wedding is anti-climactic. Since they started going steady a few years ago, there has been continuous speculation that Mar and Korina would eventually end up at the altar. But neither of them confirmed it — until Monday when Mar will make an “important announcement.”

Stay tuned for further details.

Wednesday, April 15, 2009

It has been a fantastic ride for Ciara


Like Madonna, one of her role models, Ciara (pronounced Sierra) prefers to be known without a surname. Her full name is Ciara Princess Harris, born in Austin, Texas, on Oct. 25, 1985; the only child of Carlton and Jackie Harris. She grew up on army bases in Germany, New York, Utah, California, Arizona and Nevada.

A multi-tasker, she’s a singer, songwriter, entertainer, record producer, dancer, fashion model, music video director, actress and fashion designer all rolled into one.

“I’m an achiever,” she confessed during a 20-minute exclusive phone interview with Funfare (she was calling from Atlanta, USA). “I enjoy doing so many things at the same time.”

The interview was arranged by Sony BMG Music Entertainment which released her debut album, Goodies, and sophomore album, Ciara: The Evolution. Her third album, Fantasy Ride, to be released anytime now simultaneously in the US and the Philippines, includes a duet with Justin Timberlake, titled Love Sex Magic.

Excerpts:

Why aren’t you using your surname?

“Well, I like the way Ciara sounds as opposed to Ciara Princess Harris. It sounds better, doesn’t it?”

You are a singer, songwriter, entertainer, record producer, dancer, fashion model, music video director, actress and a fashion designer. How do you find time for all of them?

“If you set your mind to it, you can do a lot of things all at the same time. I am the type who wants to do so many things, to create so many goals, and I work hard to achieve them. I enjoy doing it.”

As a child, didn’t you want to be something else?

“I love to dance ever since I was a kid, so I knew that I would be a dancer. I also like to sing, so I knew that I would be a singer, even if I was sad about my singing.”

Sad? Why?

“I don’t know. Maybe I wasn’t satisfied with it when I was younger. I was aggressive even when I was young; I wanted to try everything. I wanted to be a model, too, and even then I was fond of clothes and make-up. Finally, I got to an age where I understood what I really wanted to do and that is to be a singer.”

You have such a beautiful body. How do you maintain it?

“Well, I’m strict with my diet; I don’t eat too much sweets and desserts. But I don’t deprive myself, so every now and then I eat ice-cream and French fries. But since I’m hyper-active, my metabolism works real fast. I work out for an hour six days a week.”

How do you pamper yourself?

“I get a manicure and a pedicure. I have my hair done...that’s always fun. I go to the spa.”

How have you evolved since 2004 when you released your debut album, Goodies?

“As an artist, I’ve been trying a lot of things. I’m becoming more comfortable with myself as a woman, which is really cool.”

Has your life, to quote the title of your third album, really been a “fantasy ride” this past few years?

“Definitely! It has been a real fantasy ride and I hope it doesn’t stop. I’m enjoying it! It has been a wonderful journey, with something new coming up every year. It’s even more fun because I’m trying to understand my environment a little bit more, you know.”

You recorded Love Sex Magic with Justin Timberlake for your Fantasy Ride album. How was the experience?

“Oh, I had fun! We had fun. Justin is very sweet, very down-to-earth. A beautiful guy, definitely.”

You are an only child. What was your childhood like?

“When I was small, I wanted to have a brother or a sister. But when I got older, I got used to not having any. I have gotten used to being an only child but it took time.”

You grew up in army bases in Germany, New York, Utah, California, Arizona and Nevada. How was the experience different from that of any typical child?

“The only difference was that I traveled a lot. I wasn’t at home as other children were most of the time. Our family kept on moving from one place to another. I experienced different cultures.”

What was the best thing that you learned from these places?

“Oh, I learned that people are different only because they live in different places and have different cultures, but everybody is basically the same. It was a very good experience, very awesome, and it helped make embracing people of different cultures so much easier. I recommend traveling to everybody.”

According to your bio-data, watching Destiny’s Child in a TV program inspired you to pursue a career in music. Who are your other musical influences?

“Oh, there’s Michael Jackson, Janet Jackson and Madonna. They are my inspiration.”

Saturday, April 11, 2009

Promotion is bad for you: British research


LONDON (AFP) - - Job promotion can harm your health and leave you substantially less time to visit the doctor, British researchers claim in a study published Friday.

Economics and psychology researchers at the University of Warwick in central England found that promotion produces 10 percent more mental strain and leaves up to 20 percent less time to visit the doctor in the event of illness.

The team tested the assumption that an improvement in job status leads to better health due to an increased sense of self-worth.

Using data collected in Britain on about 1,000 individual promotions from 1991 to 2005, they found no evidence of improved physical health after promotion.

But they did find that people thrust into more senior jobs suffered significantly greater mental strain.

Researcher Chris Boyce said: "Getting a promotion at work is not as great as many people think. Our research finds that the mental health of managers typically deteriorates after a job promotion, and in a way that goes beyond merely a short-term change.

"There are no indications of any health improvements for promoted people other than reduced attendance at GP (General Practitioner) surgeries, which may itself be something to worry about rather than celebrate."

Wednesday, April 8, 2009

GM and Segway plan electric two-wheeler


WASHINGTON (AFP) - - US automaker General Motors and scooter maker Segway announced Tuesday they were working together to build a new two-wheeled, two-seat electric vehicle for city use.

Dubbed Puma (Personal Urban Mobility and Accessibility), the vehicle would be powered by lithium-ion batteries and feature a wireless communications network allowing users to avoid traffic and prevent crashes, the companies said in a statement.

The prototype is designed to reach speeds of up to 35 miles (56 kilometers) per hour and travel up to 35 miles between recharges. But the groups did not say when the two-wheeler would hit the roads or how much it would cost.

"Imagine small, nimble electric vehicles that know where other moving objects are and avoid running into them," said GM vice president of research and development Larry Burns.

"Now, connect those vehicles in an Internet-like web and you can greatly enhance the ability of people to move through cities, find places to park and connect to their social and business networks."

Segway president and CEO Jim Norrod said the project would "demonstrate a dramatically different approach to urban mobility."

Embattled GM, which has already received 13.4 billion dollars in federal bailout funds, is under pressure from the government to develop more environmentally conscious technology less dependent on oil.


Friday, April 3, 2009

G20 blacklists RP, 3 other tax havens

LONDON – The Philippines was among four nations blacklisted as uncooperative tax havens yesterday after Group of 20 leaders declared the age of banking secrecy was over and said they would no longer tolerate shady havens draining away badly needed tax revenue.

At the request of the G20 summit of rich and developing nations, the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) named the Philippines, Uruguay, Costa Rica and the Malaysian territory of Labuan as the worst offenders, saying they had refused to adopt new rules on financial openness.

Leaders had agreed to name and shame the countries that refuse to exchange tax information, which could result in tough sanctions – including the withdrawal of financing by the World Bank or International Monetary Fund.

“The time of banking secrecy has passed,” French President Nicholas Sarkozy said following the summit. “Everyone around the table wants an end to tax havens. Everyone knows we need sanctions.”

The announcement reflects mounting concern that banking secrecy in tax havens has helped to worsen the economic crisis by disguising the true value of some global assets. Anti-poverty activists say such places provide corrupt officials places to stash illicit funds, often depriving poor nations of needed resources.

The OECD has divided countries into three categories: those who comply with rules on sharing tax information, those who say they will but have yet to act and nations which have not yet agreed to change banking secrecy practices.

Switzerland and Liechtenstein, which both have strong banking secrecy traditions, said last month they would adopt international rules on tax cooperation and were ready to comply with G20 demands.

Liechtenstein, Switzerland’s tiny Alpine neighbor, said it has already met with British officials to prepare for the new standards. Monaco said earlier that it would be more transparent with foreign tax authorities.

In return they were spared the fate of being blacklisted but were left in a gray area of countries that still have to implement their commitment to accept new information-exchange standards.

China supported the blacklisting, but would not agree to have two territories, Hong Kong and Macau, classified as uncooperative tax havens.

Potential sanctions for transgressors include extra audits of those who use tax havens and curbs on tax deductions claimed by businesses using the territories.

In their communiquƩ, leaders said they may consider further penalties in their bilateral relations with tax haven territories.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel said Brown and President Barack Obama played a key role in pushing for a crackdown on tax havens.

At least 35 offshore tax havens, from Britain’s Channel Islands to the Cayman Islands in the Caribbean, are under increasing pressure to provide more information to international authorities to prevent people from evading taxes or hiding income by shifting money to such places.

Stephen Timms, financial secretary to the British Treasury, said a culture of banking secrecy had worsened global economic problems.

“That lack of transparency – that opaqueness – has contributed to the severity of the problems we are seeing in the world economy at the moment,” he said.

Thursday, April 2, 2009

AFP surrounds Sayyaf lair

MANILA, Philippines - Security forces have surrounded the jungle hideouts in Sulu of the Abu Sayyaf bandits holding hostage three workers of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC).

But Interior and Local Government Secretary Ronaldo Puno said the government would exhaust all peaceful efforts before ordering a rescue operation, which he said is easy to plan.

“We will do whatever it takes to save the hostages. We want to negotiate our way to settlement,” he told The STAR. He also ruled out beefing up police and military forces in the area.

Puno said there is “a high degree of certainty” that the hostages are still alive.

A military assault loomed as the whereabouts of the three hostages – Filipina Mary Jean Lacaba, Swiss Andreas Notter and Italian Eugenio Vagni – remained unknown as of yesterday.

The three have been held in the jungles of Sulu since Jan. 15. They were abducted after a visit to a local prison where the Red Cross is funding a water project. A military source said the hostages as well as their captors led by Al Bader Parad and Dr. Abu were seen in a coastal area in Parang near Indanan. “After the series of encounters in Indanan last month with the Marines, they relocated their position to Parang,” he said.

Proof of life

Philippine National Red Cross chairman and Sen. Richard Gordon asked the Abu Sayyaf for proof that three aid workers were alive as troops and tanks moved closer amid threats to behead the captives.

In Rome, Italy’s President Giorgio Napolitano pleaded with the kidnappers to show mercy instead of “hate and intolerance.”

Napolitano called for the “unconditional release” of the hostages to “bring an end to a situation that has provoked the anxiety of the hostages’ families as well as that of Italian and international public opinion.”

Sulu Gov. Abdusakur Tan said an informant told him the three Red Cross captives were alive Tuesday hours after their kidnappers threatened to kill one of them if troops did not withdraw.

“I want to talk to the three. It is a measure to rebuild confidence,” Gordon said in a radio interview.

He also said Tan’s declaration of a state of emergency might spawn human rights abuses and distract authorities’ attention from the kidnapping crisis.

Puno also said the government’s crisis management team has not received any new demand from the bandits.

“Maybe the reason they’re not calling is that they’re looking for a new place to hide,” he said in Filipino.

The declaration of a state of emergency included curfew, roadblocks and redeployment of government forces near the Abu Sayyaf camp in Indanan, only a week after they pulled out in hopes the hostages might be freed.

Tanks and truckloads of Marines rolled out of a Jolo camp toward Indanan to surround the gunmen in a hilly jungle, Tan said.

Puno earlier rejected a demand for the government to vacate 15 Jolo villages in addition to loosening a security cordon around the rebels. He said such a move would leave the island’s civilian population exposed to rebel attacks.

Puno met police and military commanders in Zamboanga City Tuesday night reportedly for a briefing on a possible rescue operation.

Philippine National Police chief Director General Jesus Verzosa, for his part, assured Sulu officials of the PNP’s readiness to provide them with manpower and other resources if necessary.

Hostage wounded?

A ground commander said one of the hostages was reportedly shot and wounded while trying to escape.

“We received unconfirmed reports that before the 2 p.m. deadline the other day, Notter tried to escape but was chased and shot by his kidnappers,” the military official, who declined to be named, said.

Being a former soldier, Notter was the most restless of the three hostages and could have indeed made a bold attempt to escape, the official said.

But until the report is verified, he said the crisis committee considers all the three hostages unharmed.

No direct hand

MalacaƱang is not taking a direct hand in the hostage crisis but is prepared to take decisive action, like ordering a rescue operation.

Executive Secretary Eduardo Ermita said the local crisis management committee, headed by Tan, would still be in charge.

But he said Puno and Defense Secretary Gilbert Teodoro have been ordered to stay in Zamboanga City to give directions on the handling of the crisis.

“Negotiation is still the primary effort. The order to reposition (troops) is only to show them the government responded (to their demands) in the hope the Abu Sayyaf will stand by (its) commitment to release hostages,” Ermita told a news briefing.

“But since they didn’t do that and even sent threats (to behead), the government is not without the necessary measures to confront them,” he said.

“We are talking with irrational people. They’re terrorists and taking hostage people working for the community is a sign of irrationality,” Ermita said.

He maintained that Mrs. Arroyo is keeping close tabs on the crisis.

“She has already provided general policy guidelines and let’s leave it at that, as it is being handled by Cabinet members,” he said.

Call for prayer

As the crisis deepens, the Catholic Church again urged Filipinos to pray for the release of the three kidnapped ICRC workers.

Jaro, Iloilo Archbishop Angel Lagdameo, who is also president of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippines, circulated copies of a Pastoral Exhortation, which would be read in churches across the country.

“We exhort our Filipino brothers and sisters to reach out to both kidnappers and their hostages with prayers. Let it be a whole nation praying that all may experience true freedom and security,” Lagdameo said.

“May healing and forgiveness take place, hostilities cease and peace prevail,” he said.

“We appeal to both the groups of kidnappers and the government officials to use every peaceful means to address through peaceful process whatever is at the root of this on-going problem of kidnapping in order that there may be peace in Jolo, in Mindanao and the whole country,” the Iloilo prelate said.

For his part, Manila Archbishop Gaudencio Cardinal Rosales on Tuesday asked President Arroyo to work for a peaceful end to the crisis.

“It is true that in dealing with the unreasonable, there must be the exercise of firmness. But precisely because there is the non-use of reason, there needs to be the exercise of a mutually instructive dialogue, a sharing in the mutual shift in the focus of demands and the final disarming of threats and fears,” Rosales told Mrs. Arroyo in a letter.

Meanwhile, Anak Mindanao Rep. Mujiv Hataman asked Muslim religious and political leaders to help mediate for the safe release of the three ICRC workers.

“We further call on Muslim leaders, especially the religious leaders, to take on the challenge of mediating and convincing the captors to be humane and just, as what Muslims should really be,” he said.

State-of-emergency backed

Hataman also expressed support for Tan’s declaration of a state of emergency in Sulu. “But we hope that this will pave the way to nothing but the safe release or rescue of the victims. We still opt for a peaceful resolution to this crisis,” he said.

Senate minority Leader Aquilino Pimentel Jr. also voiced support for the declaration of a state of emergency in Sulu.

“The situation justifies emergency in Sulu. Local government officials should clear the target area of civilians,” Pimentel, who is from Mindanao, said.

Another lawmaker, Muntinlupa City Rep. Ruffy Biazon, urged the government not to give in to the demands of Abu Sayyaf Group for a full military pullout.

“What they have agreed to is a partial redeployment of troops which I think is the best thing to do in this situation. I believe that the government must not give in to the kidnappers’ demands,’’ Biazon, vice chairman of the House committee on national defense, said.

“The goal is to close all channels of escape and outnumber the opponents. Whether or not the military succeeds in saving the hostages, the main goal is to capture all of the perpetrators,’’ he said.

What about other hostages?

Sen. Francis Escudero, meanwhile, said the government should not ignore other kidnap victims still in the hands of bandits.

“While I commend the efforts being undertaken for the safe release of the three humanitarian workers of the International Committee of the Red Cross, the same amount of energy should be evident in actions to free other captives, especially teachers, now held in captivity in different parts of Mindanao,” the opposition senator said.

The Abu Sayyaf group has beheaded hostages in the past, including an American in 2001 and seven Filipinos in 2007.

The US government has placed the Abu Sayyaf, which has about 400 gunmen, on its list of terrorist organizations