April 2007

Window Shopping For A New Religion?

If you’re currently asking yourself if you belong to the religion most in line with your sensibilities or you’re simply interested about the nuances about other systems of faith and belief, I encourage you to take this test. It will take a bit of time, but the appraisal that it will give you will be very comprehensive.

My Results: Continue Reading »

Views Counter v.0.10 Viewed 12895 times by 2676 viewers

atheism
religion

Comments (14)

Permalink

Another Hiatus Looms

Just shortly after my unannounced and extended break that I took while I was busy adjudicating at the Philippine Intercollegiate Debate Championships, it’s again likely that I will be missing in action for a considerable period of time this coming week. The outgoing members of the debate organization I was once part of (I resigned a couple of years ago) decided to hold their despedida by organizing a trip to Galera this week. Since I live fairly close to Puerto Galera, I’ll most definitely be the tag along for this trip.

 

So there, just in case I suddenly stop posting for another string of days, don’t miss me too much. That only means I’ve under the tropical sun, inducing skin cancer upon myself while having a great time with excellent company.

 

PS: If you’re waiting for Hundred Islands pictures, I’m also waiting for them. I wasn’t the designated photographer because I don’t have a camera other than my paltry and mediocre w800i.

Views Counter v.0.10 Viewed 10050 times by 1850 viewers

blogging
debate
travel

Comments (3)

Permalink

Humbled In The Presence Of Genius

For this post, I decided to honor and give due commendation to three bloggers who I feel raise the bar in terms of the quality of blogging that one would expect from upstarts. Due to their status as relative unknowns in the Philippine Blogosphere, I would like to hope that having them featured in this humble blog would somehow make them more known to a greater number of people. Trust me, these people really do deserve your attention.

In this day and age, it is quite refreshing to an artist to still use the traditional media for visual art and publish it in a digitized manner. Computer graphics artists are dime a dozen in the blogosphere and artists who continue to resort to the old and tested forms of visual art rarely showcase their works in websites and other virtual media. The picture above was drawn by Ellen, a very interesting and capable artist whose blog I first chanced upon on this thread. That’s a pretty good likeness of Michael Buble, right? On her site, you would be able to see her portraits of other known personalities like Nicole Kidman and even Phoenix Suns basketball star Steve Nash. She’s not a woman of many words, but her pictures really do tell a whole lot.

 

Next, I pay homage to the self-effacing Totomai. The guy’s writing and photography skills are definitely a notch or two higher than your average blogger. His eye for choosing which subjects to showcase with his Casio EX-Z40 camera is absolutely impeccable. He stayed for a while in the Land Of The Rising Sun and that gave him the chance to capture this utterly breath-taking shot of cherry blossoms  fine… magnolias set against an equally stunning Japanese sky. That’s easily a book cover right there.

Bloggers of his caliber definitely deserve more hits than what he currently gets.

I chose to put Coy last simply because he’s literally on his way to becoming the toast of the Philippine Blogosphere. One look at his well-produced and smartly-narrated video blog would prove that I’m not exaggerating one bit. He is the real deal. There’s something about his delivery that makes the story that he’s presenting real genuine, sincere and tangible. The production value of the actual program is nothing to scoff at as well. He has the critical ear for which songs would sound best with his narrations and presentations and most importantly, he can talk audibly and coherently in his very commercial (in a radio DJ kind of way) tone.

It goes without saying that all through are excellent artists and writers in their own right. It’s amazing that in this day and age wherein more than half of the bloggers are busy minding their SEO know-hows and earnings from Google Adsense, there are still upstarts who continue to choose the noble path. Yes, all three of them – talented as they are — do not have any hints monetization on their blogs.

They blog to express themselves – nothing more, nothing less.

Whether it is conscious effort or a product of their naivety as newcomers to the blogging world, it’s quite sobering to see three very good blogs without a mere whiff of a sponsored link, text ad or banner. It almost makes me feel ashamed.

I’m quite sure in the beginning, this was what we all wanted. Blogging gave us the chance to be published without necessarily becoming writers in the magazine or a local daily. Somewhere along the line, we betrayed that noble and most respectable cause by acceding to monetary incentives. Of course, this concession happened in various degrees, but I’m sure almost all of us are guilty.

Views Counter v.0.10 Viewed 11548 times by 2616 viewers

blogging

Comments (18)

Permalink

The Coolest Thing Ever!

[for people who can't code]

If you’re not code savvy to edit your themes the old school way, you would definitely appreciate this new tool.

WordPress Theme Generator is NOT a misnomer. It does what it’s supposed to do. It generates your customized specifications to fit into your very own WordPress themes. I’m jumping up and down as I type this. Hurray for the Luddites!!!

Views Counter v.0.10 Viewed 9083 times by 2140 viewers

tech

Comments (6)

Permalink

Adjudication

I’ve been dropping the word a lot the past week without really properly explaining what the hell it is about. Debate jargons can sound so Greek to non-debaters, but understandably for those geeky, nerdy and competitive enough to live out a passionate life as a debater, such terms are almost second nature.

During tournaments, institutions (i.e. schools and debate organizations) are required to field in N adjudicators for the N teams that have chosen to represent them. Adjudicators are the average reasonable people who decide debates by weighing the way teams argued their specific cases and assessing which team held the most water and was most relevant through the course of the debate. They may not be the ones arguing passionately, but their position as arbiter is very critical in ensuring that the best team for the round will be rewarded with the win.

To neophytes, adjudication is often seen in a negative light because let’s face it, people join debate organizations to debate and not adjudicate. Prior to competitions, debate organizations usually hold “try outs” – a mini tournament that would ultimately decide who gets to debate in the next big tournament. Those who meet the grade for the available debate slots will get to compete as debaters while those who fall by the wayside will be relegated to being adjudicators. Admittedly, it is a big blow to one’s ego that you are among the worst debaters in your institution and you’re not cut out for debating in the next tournament.

I was put into this predicament during my first year in the organization. It was tough. I knew I was somewhat good enough, but the breaks just didn’t happen at the right time. There’s nothing worse than being a newbie trainee adjudicator in a national tournament. Your opinions don’t matter and it’s the lowest of the low in terms of the whole totem pole. You’re basically a second-class citizen.

-

I resigned from the organization two years ago when I realized that I’ve hit my ceiling. That was as it and I vowed never to look back. As time went by though, I noticed that the Circle was slowly losing the people that I was with when I was still a member. People who go to Med School have the distinct advantage of staying in the scene for almost two-college-lives so it was quite easy to just stick to one vantage point and look at how the org progressed without me.

Then, the Philippine Intercollegiate Debate Championship came. I was informed about it mere days before the group was to leave for the far away kingdom of Tarlac. Knowing that my former org needed my help (and they were willing to pay for my registration in the tournament), I went with them and helped them train a couple of days before leaving.

Then, it hit me.

Adjudication is the most important thing about debate. Adjudicators are the guides that mold speakers into making more effective arguments. It’s almost imperative for veterans to be more involved with the development of the younger debaters especially now that the entire debating scene is undergoing a renewal of sorts. The older generation (dinosaurs) is almost poised to leave the torch to the younger batch of debaters starting next school year. Interestingly, this seems to be the trend throughout the entire debating community. All schools are revamping and the debaters are younger (and more inexperienced) than ever.

I went to Tarlac on a whim, but as I adjudicated through the rounds, I realized that the younger debaters (from other schools) were giving respect as far as how well I judged their rounds. It’s not easy to tell a team that they lost despite months of hard work, but to be able to explain that in a constructive manner is a skill that I’ve learned on the job. These people wanted to learn and I humbly shared my sentiments on how cases should be argued and which arguments are relevant or out of line. They listened and I’m grateful that they did.

I am not a debate heavy weight. I was barely visible during my tenure. Sure, I had some shining moments, it was not going to make me a household name as far as the scene was concerned. Being respected in the way I was totally caught me by surprise.

I was made chair (that’s the top adjudicator in a round) five out of seven times. It’s quite flattering to be trusted by the Adjudication Core to significantly influence how certain teams will fare in the tournament. Being chair that many times was already enough for me to call it a success. I was never cited for my adjudication skills in my organization – two years ago, I was often criticized for not being able to adjudicate properly. Well guess what! They were wrong. Haha.

-

It would hypocritical on my part to say that I didn’t expect to break (i.e. advance to the knockout phases of the tournament). Come on, if you’ve been chair for most of the rounds, it’s fair to assume that you’ll make the cut, right? Well, I did. I was placed in a round with Jess Lopez (champion of many tournaments from AdMU) to adjudicate the debate between AdDU A and UST A. Balloting is done individually and adjudicators are not allowed to discuss with one another prior to voting. The result – 2-1. Jess and I ruled in favor of the team from España to propel them to the final 8. Sadly, that decision sent AdDU A out of contention.

As the break rounds go on, the number of debates also decrease. Ergo, adjudicators are also cut drastically to ensure that the best ones available are left to decide the most important matches. Surprisingly, my name was still called for the quarter finals!

The quarterfinals I was assigned to featured AdMU A (the team that blazed to a 7-0 preliminary record) and the up and coming UP Baguio A. I was in a panel of five adjudicators chaired by the Chief Adjudicator himself – Carl Ng of UP Diliman. The panel was unanimous in giving the round the Ateneo. That meant the trio of Parmanand, Biscocho and Claudio were just two wins away from holding the first Philippine Intercollegiate Debate Championship trophy.

Ok, that had to be it, right? There’s no way I was adjudicating in the semifinals. Wrong. My name was again called and this time, I was asked to be in a seven-man panel (led by Deputy Chief Adjudicator Steph Co – AdMU) to decide on the debate between second-seed UPD A (6-1) and third-seed UST A (5-2). That was the second time that I was adjudicating both teams. I judged in favor of UPD A in Round 7 when they faced UPD D while I gave UST A the win during the octofinals.

The panel didn’t come up with a unanimous decision, but a 6-1 split was just as clear. With that said, the top two teams from the preliminaries still ended up as the last two teams standing. It was going to be AdMU A versus UPD A for the top prize.

Ok, now there’s no way I’ll adjudicating in the finals, right?! Come on! I walked into this tournament after two years of hiatus andf without any semblance of a political clout.

And yet it happened.

I was called upon to adjudicate in the finals. Seven votes will decide who get to be the champion – one of them will be mine. After listening to eight amazing finals-worthy speeches, the majority of five ruled to give it to the team from Ateneo. My vote was one of the votes that made it official. Aside from casting my vote, I also tried to play a role in the discussion that ensued to make sure that we were all on the same page.

—-

Even though I’m already an outsider who just decided to chip in, I do feel somehow responsible and obligated to give back to the organization that nurtured me and the scene that served as the venue of my exploits. Debate has become a part of my being in one way or the other and now that the scene seems going through a transition, it wouldn’t hurt to have one extra concerned mind to help out.

 

I told someone via SMS that I made it to the finals!

He replied in a better luck next time tone. Some people just never get it.

I was happy to break and adjudicating in the quarters, semis and *gasp* finals was way more than what I expected.

I also realize though that this is quite a feat for a “rookie” adjudicator. There’s no way to go but down. DAMMIT!

Tsk tsk. Talking about debate when the next competition is still six months away is not good. I’m officially suffering from a bad case of PTS – Post Tournament Syndrome. Gaaaaah.

Views Counter v.0.10 Viewed 6461 times by 1583 viewers

debate

Comments (13)

Permalink

Amped! Vol. 1

This is of course, a suggestion by Mikko. Aside from an opinionated rights activist (!), I’m also a musician who bleeds with passion regarding the songs that I personally write/co-write. Now that my band is on hiatus (cue tears rolling down my cheek taking bits of kohl along the way), I have immersed myself with other people’s music. From this point on, I’ll be posting the three artists that I’ve listened the most to for that particular week as well as a little bit of an appraisal on what they sound like.

 

Keep in mind that I spent the week at Tarlac for a debate tourney and couple of days marooned at the Hundred Islands. How is that relevant? Good question – it’s not.

 

The Mars Volta 

Fans of the now-defunct band At Drive-In should know that The Mars Volta is one of the most eccentric and frenetic bands in existence today (If you haven’t noticed yet, this is one of the factors that draws me towards certain artists).They have released three albums (De-loused In A Comatorium, Frances, The Mute and Amputechture) and one EP (Tremulant EP) since former ADI member Cedric Bixler-Zavala and Omar Rodriguez-Lopez decided to form the hard-to-classify outfit.

 

Inertiatic ESP - The Mars Volta – De-loused In A Comatorium

 

Words will never justify how rich and jumpy the sound gets. It’s a musical odyssey that totally jolts you out of your seat.  The band has all the bases covered – you want jazz fusion? latin inspired ditties with Spanish lyrics? They’ve thought about it way before you’ve wondered if it was even possible.

 

 

 WDOUJI

Chances are, WDOUJI (or the Witch Doctors Of Underground Jazz Improvisation) is the best band that has come and gone of existence without you noticing. It’s quite a shame considering the immense talent that the band packed over the span of the considerable number of years they were around. I was lucky enough to get a copy of their debut CD (Ground Zero) and even if I’m not a big jazz fan, I found it quite easy to appreciate the musical philosophy that WDOUJI was founded on.

 

Ron-Ron And The Flower Angel Blues – WDOUJI – Ground Zero

 

It takes a lot to make a song without lyrics non-background music fodder, but WDOUJI pulled it off flawlessly regardless of which approach they took.

 

 

And lastly…

Protest The Hero

Seriously, you were expecting someone else? I would be lying if I didn’t admit that half the time I was listening to music, I was busy mouthing off the words to the songs to this album.

 

 

 

 

Views Counter v.0.10 Viewed 5529 times by 1465 viewers

music

Comments (5)

Permalink