Jim Paredes is in the building!

Blog EntryComing homeMay 11, '08 6:53 PM
for everyone

HUMMING IN MY UNIVERSE By Jim Paredes
Sunday, May 11, 2008

I’m back in Manila after a little over a month in Sydney and upon arriving at my house and spending the first night here, I noticed myself going through it again — a depressing feeling coming over me. I’ve noticed this pattern occurring every time I come back to Manila: I return to the Philippines feeling disoriented and kind of  sad, like my heart and mind are forced  to be in two places.

While everything here is familiar, it is way too familiar. I am not talking of friends or relatives but the place in general. Nothing seems to change for the better. I think of the contempt that familiarity supposedly breeds as I see the decay and mayhem when I drive through different parts of the city. There is an inertia in this city that drags my spirit down as I see the soot on the buildings, the snarl of traffic, the general disorder that is the normal state of affairs here.

In many places, I see the classic sign of entropic decline, as if the city has stopped taking care of itself and is allowing itself to wither and disintegrate. I seriously ask myself if it is just my mood at the moment or if I have become that type of Filipino who one often meets abroad who does not see anything good in this country anymore.

I know the answer can’t be any of that because I know I do love this country. Perhaps it is the privilege of being able to travel a lot and live in another place and see how much more charming, benign and beautiful many cities are compared to Manila. If a few articles ago, I wrote about what I would do if I had the power to change things nationwide, this time I would like to indulge the idealist/control freak in me and ask questions and make suggestions on how things in Metro Manila can be made better in little and big ways. I write this without looking at the costs involved. All I know is that they will make this city so much more livable and esthetically pleasing. My suggestions:

1)  The MMDA should issue a directive that orders all structures, buildings and establishments along main roads to be freshly painted every five years and for their immediate surroundings to be kept sparkling clean. There must be a department or bureau that will issue esthetic guidelines to rethink or re-imagine Metro Manila and give the city character and a look that is positive. There are places in India, Israel, Greece and other countries where the building code stipulates the colors that every establishment must use. That’s not a bad idea to follow. If we have to give tax rebates for the city to get spruced up, let’s do it. But enforcement must be strict with heavy fines imposed for non-compliance.

2)  Re-zone the city so that commercial and residential areas are clearly separate.

3) Finally phase out jeepneys and old buses within a short period of time — no more than three years. They have had their glory days. It’s now time to modernize transportation so that there are less cars on the road. And more trains, please.

4) Make the main roads billboard-free. Many major cities in the world show off their city buildings, public art and architectural structures along their main thoroughfares, not display crass pictures of celebrities hawking products and services.

5)  Scrub the public walls and roads so that they look brighter. Put art in as many places as possible. One of the most amazing sights for me was seeing the Moscow subway for the first time in 1990. It was bedecked with chandeliers stripped from the palaces of the Czars when the Communists took over. It was also quite impressive to see big proletarian art decorating the underground corridors.

6)  Build bigger statues and monuments that people can actually mill around. Recently, I saw the new statues along Roxas Boulevard and I thought they were incredibly puny. Some of them were so tiny they were practically just life-sized representations of the people they honored. In effect, they projected a smallness, not the bigger-than-life greatness of the people they were intended to extol. It’s not hard to imagine that many of the statues go largely unnoticed by people passing by in their cars. And they are in areas so cramped, people can hardly congregate around them.

7)  The media should project the city and its people more realistically and with more dynamism. And they should feed the cultural soul of its citizens.

One of my pet peeves is FM radio in the Philippines, which seems quite divorced from its local setting in the way it conducts itself. FM radio stations should drop their emulation and adoration of the US formats and play more OPM, current and not-so-current favorites. And even better, the disc jockeys should stop putting on American accents and make us listeners feel like we are in America. It would be great if they put on a more local flavor. Listening to some of them makes my hair stand on end. The way they try so hard at sounding like their LA counterparts makes me (and a lot of people I know) cringe. The airwaves should express what we are as a people, not emulate our ex-colonizers!

8)  And can our TV newscasters please stop sounding like sensationalistic bad news bears? GMA-7’s Mike Enriquez and everyone at ABS-CBN sound like they are out to scare and terrify us. The whole siren-like, in-your-face approach to news seems primarily to elicit fear, panic and depression among viewers in place of simply informing them. I believe that more calm and objectivity, not to mention less shrillness and overacting on the part of those who deliver the news, can make life less stressful and more bearable and still keep us informed.

9)  Promote the virtue of silence in the streets. Our streets are way too noisy with people honking their horns on the road in traffic and when they “announce” their presence as they get home. People who walk along the streets at night talk too loudly and seem unmindful that people in their homes may already be sleeping. Generally, we could all be more considerate of our neighbors by toning down our noise level in public.

10)  Clean up all the waterways so that they can  be beautiful once again and be used for public transport at the same time. Don’t tell me it’s not possible. The Thames in London used to be a cesspool but, with political will, they cleaned it up.

11) Where we can put the phone cables and power lines underground, let us do so that we may see the skies without these ugly lines obstructing our view. Believe me, this simple act will transform any neighborhood into a cleaner one.

I know there are readers who will be dismissive of all these suggestions. I myself would have scoffed at such an article years ago. I would have dismissed it as a rant of someone who has the option to live somewhere else. Perhaps. But I believe that the reason why many Metro Manilans, or Filipinos nationwide, are inured to ugliness and decay is because they do not see the slow deterioration of their lives. In my case, brief absences make my senses more alive to the changes and I can really see the decline. It’s no different from seeing people on TV every day versus seeing them only once a year. You notice age catching up with them more when you don’t see them often.

Lastly, like everyone else, I have heard all the logical excuses as to why change cannot happen. We have analyzed enough and have been paralyzed as a result for way too long. I believe though that the imperative for things to change is greater than all of the excuses for us to find ways to go around and finally do what needs to be done.

* * *

This is the second to last announcement on the upcoming 40th “Tapping the Creative Universe Workshop” which runs from May 12 to 17 and concludes May 20, 7 to 9 p.m., at 113 B. Gonzales, Loyola Heights, QC. Please call 426-5375 or 0916 855-4303 for a syllabus and reservations.

Visit http://tappingthecreativeuniverse.com for a look at what it is about.

This workshop will transform you.

15 CommentsChronological   Reverse   Threaded
bobanne5671 wrote on May 11, '08
agree po ako sa lahat ng sinabi nyo here apo jim.i even told one online buddy,brother martin(bromart.multiply.com),an environmentalist na bakit in a country often struck by drought & never-ending crazy weather patterns like australia eh nakakapag-provide pa rin ang mga farmers ng better quality of aussie produce & dairy products?i mean,maraming nagagawa ng ibang bansa ang kayang gawin sa pinas if not only for the lists of excuses na ginagawa ng ating nation as a whole(from the upper level of governance down to the poorest of poor).
vdrc wrote on May 11, '08
i came home after living in LA for 15 years. i felt the same: disoriented and sadly, dismayed which was anti-climactic since i was so looking forward to finally going back home. the streets were too noisy with all the honking; i was just so amazed they allow so many billboards and at those sizes.Those cables and lines are a disaster waiting to happen. my friends and families were so proud at how our city up north has "progressed" - i saw chaos. And you are right, you don't see these changes unless you get to live in another country.
karinaraneta wrote on May 11, '08
MY COMMENTS, IN CAPS...(MAHABA ITO, PASENSYA NA)

1) The MMDA should issue a directive that orders all structures, buildings and establishments along main roads to be freshly painted every five years and for their immediate surroundings to be kept sparkling clean. There must be a department or bureau that will issue esthetic guidelines to rethink or re-imagine Metro Manila and give the city character and a look that is positive. There are places in India, Israel, Greece and other countries where the building code stipulates the colors that every establishment must use. That’s not a bad idea to follow. If we have to give tax rebates for the city to get spruced up, let’s do it. But enforcement must be strict with heavy fines imposed for non-compliance.

I AGREE!!!
THE PROBLEM THOUGH MAY BE THAT THE TASTE OF THOSE WHO WILL MAKE THESE GUIDELINES MAY NOT BE AS CLASSY AS THOSE FROM CULTURED GREECE, INDIA, OR ISRAEL :(
ANOTHER PROBLEM WITH THE PHILIPPINES IS THAT EVERY TIME THERE IS SOMEONE NEW IN OFFICE, THEY CHANGE GUIDELINES OR LAWS ESTABLISHED BEFORE THEM -A VERY GOOD EXAMPLE: STREET NAMES; SANTOLAN IS NOW B. SERRANO, BUENDIA IS NOW GIL PUYAT AVE...WHO ARE WE KIDDING? DON'T WE STILL CALL IT SANTOLAN AND BUENDIA? SOMETIMES THEY DO THIS AS A WAY OF NOT REALLY HONORING, BUT SUCKING UP TO THE RELATIVES OF THESE DECEASED PEOPLE WHOM THEY ARE SUPPOSEDLY HONORING BY NAMING THE STREETS AFTER THEM.
ANOTHER PROBLEM MIGHT BE THE "STRICT AND HEAVY FINES" IMPOSED FOR NON-COMPLIANCE. UNLESS WE SUCCEED IN ELIMINATING CORRUPTION, MERON AT MERONG LULUSOT KASI MERON SILANG MAHAHANAP NA PADRINO WHO THEY CAN PAY OFF TO EXEMPT THEM FROM THIS.

2) Re-zone the city so that commercial and residential areas are clearly separate.

TAMA!!!
SA PILIPINAS LANG ATA MAY POLICE HQ (LIKE CRAME) SA CITY MISMO. NOT JUST IN THE CITY, MIND YOU...ON EDSA! IN OTHER COUNTRIES, THE SUBURBS ARE MAXIMIZED. SATELLITE OFFICES OR HQs LANG ANG NASA CITY. AND SPEAKING OF THE SUBURBS BEING MAXIMIZED, IN OTHER COUNTRIES, PARTICULARLY THE U.S., TAXES AND GAS, ETC. ARE CHEAPER SA SUBURBS WHICH ENCOURAGES PEOPLE TO LIVE IN THE SUBURBS AND NOT POLLUTE THE CITY (THE WAY IT HAS HAPPENED IN MANILA). PERO SA PILIPINAS, NAPAPABAYAAN ANG MGA PROBINSYA IN TERMS OF RESOURCES (MAS MAHAL LAHAT DUN KASI NGA LAHAT NGA GALING SA MAYNILA), EVEN JOBS...SO IT IS EVERY PROBINSYANO'S DREAM TO COME TO MANILA AND "MAKE IT" HERE KASI FEELING NILA WALA SILANG MARARATING SA BAYAN NILA. SAD.
SINCE WE'RE TALKING ABOUT ZONING, GALLERIA WAS BUILT RIGHT BESIDE POVEDA (AND THIS HAPPENED RIGHT BEFORE I GRADUATED FROM THAT SCHOOL). I'M NOT SURE IF POVEDA IS THE ONE THAT'S OUT OF PLACE (SINCE MAYBE THERE SHOULDN'T BE A SCHOOL ON EDSA TO BEGIN WITH, BUT THEN AGAIN, THE SCHOOL WAS THERE LONG BEFORE ROBINSON'S DECIDED TO PUT UP GALLERIA THERE). THE SOLUTION OF POVEDA?...TO SECURE THE STUDENTS BEHIND BARS (LITERALLY LOOKING LIKE THEY'RE IN JAIL) UNTIL THEIR SUNDOs COME TO PICK THEM UP JUST TO AVOID KIDS IN CHECKERED UNIFORMS FROM FLOODING THE MALL.
TOMAS MORATO AND JUPITER (BOTH LOCATIONS WHERE OUR FAMILY RESTO PUT UP BRANCHES) ARE COMMERCIAL MAIN ROADS LOCATED RIGHT OUTSIDE MAJOR RESIDENTIAL AREAS (THE SCOUTs AND BEL-AIR, RESPECTIVELY). HAY...

3) Finally phase out jeepneys and old buses within a short period of time — no more than three years. They have had their glory days. It’s now time to modernize transportation so that there are less cars on the road. And more trains, please.

YES!!!
BUT EVERY TIME I BRING THIS UP, I ALWAYS GET THE ANSWER NA: HAY NAKU, HINDI MANGYAYARI YAN KASI THE PRESIDENT (OR SENATORS, OR KUNG SINO MANG NATIONAL OFFICIAL) WILL NEVER DISPLEASE THE JEEPNEY AND BUS DRIVERS (A.K.A. THEIR POTENTIAL VOTERS). I THINK, AT THE VERY LEAST, TRANSPORTATION SHOULD BE GIVEN BACK TO GOVERNMENT, LIKE IT WAS DURING THE MARCOS ERA; REMEMBER THE BLUE LOVE BUSes? THIS WAY THE DRIVERS WILL NOT LIVE BY "QUOTA" OR "BOUNDARY" WHICH RESULTS IN BUSES ON EDSA STOPPING JUST ANYWHERE WHEN THEY SEE A PASAHERO WAIVING AT THEM, CAUSING MAJOR TRAFFIC.

4) Make the main roads billboard-free. Many major cities in the world show off their city buildings, public art and architectural structures along their main thoroughfares, not display crass pictures of celebrities hawking products and services.

I BELIEVE WE SHOULD HAVE MANY LITTLE VERSIONS OF NY TIMES SQUARE. A GOOD LOCATION POINTED OUT BY MY FRIEND/ARTIST (GUJI LORENZANA) IS THE TIMOG CIRCLE. BILLBOARD ALL YOU WANT THERE. JACK UP THE PRICES OF ADVERTISING! PERO DUN LANG. HINDI EVERWHERE!

5) Scrub the public walls and roads so that they look brighter. Put art in as many places as possible. One of the most amazing sights for me was seeing the Moscow subway for the first time in 1990. It was bedecked with chandeliers stripped from the palaces of the Czars when the Communists took over. It was also quite impressive to see big proletarian art decorating the underground corridors.

HAVE YOU SEEN THE "MMDA ART" ON EDSA? PARANG JOKE.

6) Build bigger statues and monuments that people can actually mill around. Recently, I saw the new statues along Roxas Boulevard and I thought they were incredibly puny. Some of them were so tiny they were practically just life-sized representations of the people they honored. In effect, they projected a smallness, not the bigger-than-life greatness of the people they were intended to extol. It’s not hard to imagine that many of the statues go largely unnoticed by people passing by in their cars. And they are in areas so cramped, people can hardly congregate around them.

YES, WE LACK PARKS AND MONUMENTS AND MUSEUMS, CONSIDERING ANG DAMI NATING SUPPOSED "HEROES".

7) The media should project the city and its people more realistically and with more dynamism. And they should feed the cultural soul of its citizens.

One of my pet peeves is FM radio in the Philippines, which seems quite divorced from its local setting in the way it conducts itself. FM radio stations should drop their emulation and adoration of the US formats and play more OPM, current and not-so-current favorites. And even better, the disc jockeys should stop putting on American accents and make us listeners feel like we are in America. It would be great if they put on a more local flavor. Listening to some of them makes my hair stand on end. The way they try so hard at sounding like their LA counterparts makes me (and a lot of people I know) cringe. The airwaves should express what we are as a people, not emulate our ex-colonizers!

DURING MY AGOT-DAYS (HAHAHA, TAGAL NA NUN), WE WERE IN THE CAR LISTENING TO OUR FAVORITE FM STATION BACK THEN. WE WERE SLOWLY STARTING TO GET ANNOYED BECAUSE THEY WERE TALKING MORE THAN THEY WERE PLAYING MUSIC (I STILL BELIEVE FM RADIO SHOULD EQUAL MUSIC, BUT THAT'S JUST ME. ANYWAY...) THERE WAS THIS FEMALE DJ WHO WAS TOTALLY ANNOYING US WITH HER FAKE SLANG. TAPOS BIGLANG HUMIRIT SYA NANG: "WHEN A MOTHER GIVE BIRTHS..." AYAAAAAAAN. SUMABLAY TULOY!

8) And can our TV newscasters please stop sounding like sensationalistic bad news bears? GMA-7’s Mike Enriquez and everyone at ABS-CBN sound like they are out to scare and terrify us. The whole siren-like, in-your-face approach to news seems primarily to elicit fear, panic and depression among viewers in place of simply informing them. I believe that more calm and objectivity, not to mention less shrillness and overacting on the part of those who deliver the news, can make life less stressful and more bearable and still keep us informed.

I AGREE.
THE FEW TIMES I LISTEN TO AM RADIO NAMAN (USUALLY WHEN I RIDE A CAB) PARANG ALL THE ANNOUNCERS THERE DO IS AGITATE THE LISTENERS! WITHOUT FAIL, I'D HEAR MY CAB DRIVER COMMENTING OUT LOUD, SO OBVIOUSLY "BILIB" IN WHAT THE ANNOUNCERS ARE SAYING, WHICH IS ALL USUALLY BAD NEWS ABOUT THE COUNTRY.
I'LL ADD TO THAT THE FACT THAT I BELIEVE "THE BUZZ" AND OTHER SHOWBIZ CHISMIS SHOWS DON'T HAVE TO BE THAT GAY! I HAVE NOTHING AGAINST GAY PEOPLE (JIM, YOU AND I HAPPEN TO KNOW AND LOVE THE MOST BRILLIANT GAY PEOPLE IN ABS). KAYA NAMAN EH (MAGING ENTERTAINING MASKI HINDI GAY). NOTICE HOW THERE IS ABSOLUTELY NOTHING GAY WITH "THE INSIDER" AND OTHER FOREIGN SHOWBIZ CHISMIS SHOWS.

ANECDOTE: WHENEVER MY ARTIST, GUJI LORENZANA, WHO IS QUITE NEW TO THE PHILIPPINES (BORN AND RAISED IN CALIFORNIA TILL HE DECIDED TO COME TO MANILA TO MAKE A NAME FOR HIMSELF HERE) IS STUCK IN TRAFFIC, HE ALWAYS TEXTS ME SOMETHING LIKE "I WANNA HAVE A WORD WITH THE CITY PLANNER!" TO WHICH I ALWAYS REPLY: "THERE IS NO CITY PLANNER!"
moyado wrote on May 11, '08
many thanks Jim for writing this. I totally agree and understand your view on this topic. One of the former members of The CompanY (Meus Bartolome) who now lives in Singapore brought her kid home and the first comment of the child was... "Mommy, why are the buildings dirty?!". Libre lang ang mangarap di ba? Sana we can live to see these "dreams" and "aspirations" happen. Actually, kung gugustuhin natin...hindi naman pangit ang bansa natin eh....
missmq wrote on May 12, '08
apojim said
One of my pet peeves is FM radio in the Philippines, which seems quite divorced from its local setting in the way it conducts itself. FM radio stations should drop their emulation and adoration of the US formats and play more OPM, current and not-so-current favorites. And even better, the disc jockeys should stop putting on American accents and make us listeners feel like we are in America. It would be great if they put on a more local flavor. Listening to some of them makes my hair stand on end. The way they try so hard at sounding like their LA counterparts makes me (and a lot of people I know) cringe. The airwaves should express what we are as a people, not emulate our ex-colonizers!
There is one radio station in my city that has this whole day thursday talk. At first i found it amusing to listen to them,
but sometimes there are topics that i was so shocked that it is being discussed on air .
more shocked to hear talks on air on what teens do now a days, do naughty & hunky punky stuff.
and yeah most dj have american accent and even their callers try to sound like they have the accent too. geez.
Well it's good rin naman that they know english very well but not try too hard to sound like an american.
Unless, they work in a call center. ;P

Thanks for the good share, I agree to all of them and may it also enlighten those who are responsible to develop and improve the city. =)

bobanne5671 wrote on May 12, '08
moyado said
many thanks Jim for writing this. I totally agree and understand your view on this topic. One of the former members of The CompanY (Meus Bartolome) who now lives in Singapore brought her kid home and the first comment of the child was... "Mommy, why are the buildings dirty?!". Libre lang ang mangarap di ba? Sana we can live to see these "dreams" and "aspirations" happen. Actually, kung gugustuhin natin...hindi naman pangit ang bansa natin eh....
sang ayon po ako,di lang sa hindi talaga pangit ang pinas kundi malaki pa rin ang potensyal nya na maging productuve agriculturally speaking kahit dumami na ang subdivisions dyan but napaka-blessed po ng philippine soils lalo na ang provinces.gaya nga po ng nauna ko nang sinabi kay apo jim,bakit dito sa australia nagkadrought na for years,some places hadnt seen rain still at inuulan na rin ng imported cheap goods from china but buhay pa rin ang agri-business?saka andaming achievements sa ibang bansa na kung sa atin gagawin eh we can give them a run for their money (my husband even suggested LPG fuel sa mga cars sa atin to lessen pollution gaya ng ginagawa dito sa oz,tipid pa sa fuel consumption) pero maliban sa kahirapan,red tape at graft & corruption e ano pa ba ang pumupigil sa pinas at sa mga pinoy na magawa ang nagawa na ng iba pang countries,isa na dun ang vietnam na mas angat pa sa kasalukuyan kesa sa atin?
bobanne5671 wrote on May 12, '08
missmq said
There is one radio station in my city that has this whole day thursday talk. At first i found it amusing to listen to them,
but sometimes there are topics that i was so shocked that it is being discussed on air .
more shocked to hear talks on air on what teens do now a days, do naughty & hunky punky stuff.
and yeah most dj have american accent and even their callers try to sound like they have the accent too. geez.
Well it's good rin naman that they know english very well but not try too hard to sound like an american.
Unless, they work in a call center. ;P

Thanks for the good share, I agree to all of them and may it also enlighten those who are responsible to develop and improve the city. =)

i totally agree
aidzvirus wrote on May 12, '08
A Singaporean Ad Man once visited Manila to check out the local advertising scene and he was overwhelmed with our billboards.

I have often wished na sana may isang sangay na strictly magco-control ng mga lumalabas na billboards, by this i mean they would just approve the ones deserving to be masterpieces. It would be good siguro kung makilala rin tayo as the billboard capital- pero puro magagandang visuals ang nakikita, not just the usual hard sells. :)
mikelgemp wrote on May 12, '08
Sighh...............
tweetybyron wrote on May 13, '08
I felt the same way when I went home in 2004. I felt so happy being back and at the same time sad because of what I see. What has become to the place I will always call HOME. =(
jazzangel wrote on May 13, '08
moyado said
many thanks Jim for writing this. I totally agree and understand your view on this topic. One of the former members of The CompanY (Meus Bartolome) who now lives in Singapore brought her kid home and the first comment of the child was... "Mommy, why are the buildings dirty?!". Libre lang ang mangarap di ba? Sana we can live to see these "dreams" and "aspirations" happen. Actually, kung gugustuhin natin...hindi naman pangit ang bansa natin eh....
I agree with you Tito Moy. Our country has deteriorated but a lot of things can still be done. It's so depressing that we all had to leave to find a more comfortable place to live in. - Jing (your Ryan Cayabyab Studio student)
judithyoung09 wrote on May 13, '08
I agree with all what you said.Hope the all the people concerned will read this and the rest of our countrymen will follow suit.All we need is compassion,empathy,self cotrol and discipline to tackle these things and take away all of our pride,have unity and love not only for ourselves but for our fellowmen as well....Kudos to your suggestions,tito jim.It shows that we need an intelligent man like you to really think of all our welfare...Godbless.
stellan67 wrote on May 13, '08
I feel the same. We were a country of such promise::"The Pearl of the Orient" and with so much talent, natural beauty & resources, what has happened to us? It is still not too late to change this, but how to do it? It needs the collective will to do it and the strong leadership to harness it.
bobanne5671 wrote on May 13, '08
I feel the same. We were a country of such promise::"The Pearl of the Orient" and with so much talent, natural beauty & resources, what has happened to us? It is still not too late to change this, but how to do it? It needs the collective will to do it and the strong leadership to harness it.
sang ayon po ako.even if the philippines is not as beautiful as it was ages ago still had the big potential to be revived so to speak.ngayon ko na nga rin po narealize ang matagal nang sinasabi ng aking hubby that our country just needs strong political will & that the entire populace should open their minds to change,plus my wish is for those in power to have the heart & REALLY do something concrete about all of the social & political problems that had been there all along.
angels4kids wrote on Jun 6, '08
I enjoy reading your articles in the Sunday papers. Just wanted to say that your suggestions are quite good and insightful. If only some of them could be implemented, it would be a tremendous improvement for the country.
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