This story
was taken from Bulatlat, the Philippines's alternative weekly
newsmagazine (www.bulatlat.com, www.bulatlat.net, www.bulatlat.org).
Vol. V, No. 35, October 9-15, 2005
COMMENTARY
Boxers, Beauty
Queens and Bugaw na Gobyerno
We need to
struggle against the prostitution of our nation. All this preposterous
government is doing is to sell our people out. In the diversion of psychic
ping-pong, our morale is at the losing end.
By JPaul Manzanilla In the rare times that I am
able to watch primetime news there is always the struggle between the same
things being churned out by the tube and the uneasiness over things to come
after all the catastrophes. Good
News: World-class Filipinos! I was watching GMA 7's
24 Oras evening of Oct. 3. News of a Filipina beauty queen who has quenched
the nation's thirst for another title dominated the broadcast. Miss
International Precious Lara Quigaman arrived from competition and the local
press was on a rampage. There she was beaming with pride, simultaneously
boosting testosterone levels and goading envy of male and female viewers.
The recent victory of
boxers Manny "Pacman" Pacquiao, Brian Viloria and Ray "Boom Boom" Bautista in
different boxing competitions followed the beauty pageant report. It was a rare
feat this time so the Manila city government paraded the three warriors on the
streets outside the city hall on the way to Malacañang. At the Palace grounds,
Gloria Macapagal- Arroyo praised Pacquiao, Viloria and Bautista for once again
raising high the Filipino morale in these trying times. Both tales dramatize the
labor to win. We see how athletes and beauty queens stand to represent the
nation in their great battles abroad. Making the best out of the human body,
Quigaman, Pacquiao, Viloria and Bautista are on a voyage to beat the odds. And
they have endured. Bad news:
The losing story For what else can be taken
to mean by all these images? For the past few months,
there is a general feeling among the people that all is lost. The President
cheated her way to electoral victory and was able to maneuver herself out of the
crisis for the moment. Oil prices have continually risen that it has become
routine for public transport drivers to ask for fare increases and the poor
majority to protest in anger. A de facto dictatorship is in place in the guise
of the calibrated preemptive response policy. Hindi lang talo. Ligalig ang
mamamayan, 'ika nga. This type of bad news initially tops ratings but later
on become losing stories of a corrupt republic. What do
these images want? I think the sense of loss
and failure is what is being evaded here. Television capitalizes on dramas of
competition, triumphs, failures, and endurance. After all the mishaps, the
Filipino spirit has to be soothed by episodes of victory. Bad news and good news
are being broadcast simultaneouslyto neutralize events, and thus, to defuse the
tensions confronting the social order. More than this formula people are coached
to recognize skills, talents and labors after our fellow countrymen have won
abroad. Isn't it fitting to reward hard work not there but here, in the
midst of all the efforts to survive? Do we have to wait for outsiders to
appreciate our kababayan before we give credit where credit is due?
Aren't we becoming master mimics of this world when we triple the praise for
those who have won the master's game? More importantly, is success possible here
in our very country? This is reactionary. We
need to know the real story. Unable to provide decent
jobs for poor rural folks, young men from the countryside resort to boxing in
hope that an agent might discover and bring them to the capital and finally
build their careers up for boxing superstardom. Boxing contests are brutal; many
die because of unprofessional game conduct. With regards beauty queens, it is
common knowledge that many become hapless victims of sexual harassment. The
modern Filipina women being sent as representatives in pageants – pretty, sexy
and witty – are effectively, if political correctness be told, anti-modern. They
are, despite and because of high social stature, exploited to strengthen and not
demolish patriarchal standards of femininity. And we all believe that Filipina
women have gone a long way from being servants and sex objects. As Filipinos
adore such images, becoming ideal citizens of this spectator republic,
television and the rest of the profit-driven media benefit from this racket.
Outlook These are not new – or more
precisely – not news anymore. We need to struggle against
the prostitution of our nation. All this preposterous government is doing is to
sell our people out. In the diversion of psychic ping-pong, our morale is at the
losing end. And the rhetoric of "good news" in popular consciousness must be
countered by critical reception. What needs to be examined are the means with
which the people work through the hardships of everyday living – skills,
talents, intelligence, hard work, innovations, ingenuity, small acts of kindness
– that are to be reworked from token appreciations to collective heroism. The
myth of the human essence beating against the odds must be rebuked for this can
only mean that the Filipino triumphs because he is simply Filipino. "Winning"
stories are after all stories of endurance. Amidst the failings in this
nation of boxers, beauty queens and a bugaw government, our daily
struggle to survive should be a movement toward a far better order we stake to
inherit. ___________ JPaul Manzanilla
teaches in the Department of Arts and
Communication of the University of the Philippines Manila. © 2005 Bulatlat
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