Wednesday, June 15, 2022

‘Little Manila?’ Why not ‘Little Philippines?’

“Society is unity in diversity.”

George Herbert Mead


By Alex P. Vidal


WHY not “Little Philippines?” 

News in the Internet has been screaming that a street corner in Queens, New York City has been officially recognized as “Little Manila Avenue.” 

It is located in the Woodside, a known Filipino community, where several Filipino-owned restaurants, cash remittance centers, a bank, law offices, beauty parlors, and grocery stores are located. 

Several Filipinos reportedly gathered in the corner of Roosevelt Avenue and 70th Street on June 12, 2022 to celebrate the co-naming of a stretch from 70th Street to 69th Street.

While Manila is the capital of the Philippines, most of the Filipinos who frequent the place—and probably own the business establishments there—are from the Visayas and Mindanao. 

If you happen to visit New York and drop by in that area, you will hear most Filipinos speak the dialects of Cebuano, Waray, and Hiligaynon.  

Ilonggos, people who speak Hiligaynon, in fact, are probably the majority in manpower and ownership of business establishments. 

Some use the Tagalog dialect to transact business and communicate with each other, but they mostly come from different regions in the Visayas and Mindanao.

Why limit the Filipino identity and heritage to Manila?


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The co-naming of that southwest tiny corner as “Little Manila Avenue” was made possible after the New York Council (NYC) Council Parks and Recreation committee voted 15-0 in December 2021 in favor of a legislation sponsored by Council Member Jimmy Van Bramer.

The vote reportedly came 18 months after residents launched a petition signed by 3,000 Filipinos to erect a street sign reading “Little Manila Avenue” at the 70th Street intersection. 

Van Bramer sponsored the legislation and was approved unanimously by NYC Council Parks and Recreation committee based on 3,000 signatures?

Were the signatories all Manila residents? Did Van Bramer consult all members of the Filipino community with diverse backgrounds before introducing the legislation?

As a resident of New York and regular habitue of that area, I wasn’t aware or wasn’t informed of the supposed signature campaign to co-name the place and use the regionalistic and probably “imperialistic” name “Manila.”

I could have suggested the word “Philippines.”

If China has the Chinatown and Korea has Koreantown, why not Philippine town or “Little Philippines?”

After all there’s no Shanghai Town or Seoul Town.


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The Sunnyside Post reported that the Filipino community started migrating to the area in the 1970s following the passage of the Immigration and Nationality Act in 1965–legislation that eased the immigration restrictions placed on people from outside Western Europe.

“Many immigrated to Queens after being recruited to work in New York hospitals due to a nursing shortage at the time. By the 1990s, 72 percent of Filipino immigrants in New York were registered nurses, according to figures released by the city council,” reported the Post.

“Several were recruited to work at Elmhurst Hospital and settled in surrounding neighborhoods like Woodside—where a Filipino community has since flourished.”

During the last census, about 86,000 Filipinos and Filipino Americans were estimated to be residing in New York City with about 54 percent living in the borough of Queens.

The Post further reported that residents began advocating for a street sign soon after a mural went up in June 2020 on the corner of 69th Street and Roosevelt Avenue that pays tribute to the Filipino healthcare workers who risked—and in some cases, gave—their lives during the peak of the coronavirus pandemic.

According to the Post, the mural reads “Mabuhay,” a Philippine expression that has several meanings, including “cheers”, “welcome” and “may you live.”

It quoted Van Bramer as saying he started working on the legislation calling for the co-naming shortly after attending a ceremony where the mural was unveiled.

“People were talking about renaming the area Little Manila and I wanted it done,” he said. “I wanted to honor the Filipino and Filipino American community who are an important part of the Woodside community.”

According to his office, as reported by the Post, there are no official records of a “Little Manila” elsewhere in the city. Therefore, the street co-naming, he said, would bring visibility to the contributions the Filipino community has made to Woodside and the city as a whole.

“I wanted to make sure that this became law while I was a council member,” Van Bramer said.

(The author, who is now based in New York City, used to be the editor of two local dailies in Iloilo.—Ed)



 



Saturday, June 11, 2022

Believe it or not, gas is now $5 per gallon

 

“With about a dozen assorted ongoing conflicts in the news every day, and with the stories becoming more horrific, the level of sadness becomes unbearable. And what becomes of our planet when that sadness becomes apathy? Because we feel helpless. And we turn our heads and turn the page.”

Eddie Vedder


By Alex P. Vidal


TWO major news or subject matters in the American soil caught my attention over the weekend: 1. The survey that showed 51 percent of New Yorkers were afraid to take the subway as a mode of transportation these past two weeks; 2. The start of the January 6 House Committee hearing watched “live” by millions of Americans on June 9.

They were, however, eclipsed by the report on June 10 of the breaching at $5 of the regular unleaded gas’ average price per gallon, the first time in history.

As of this writing, average national prices rose to $5.004, according to the America Automobile Association (AAA), though that is reportedly not adjusted for inflation. 

The milestone comes just as the peak summer driving season gets underway.

The record high, according to OPIS, an energy-data and analytics provider, comes as U.S. consumer inflation hit its highest level in 40 years and crude oil prices remain high.

Gas prices skyrocketed reportedly after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine earlier this year, with traders, shippers and financiers shunning Russian oil supplies. 

Oil inventories, which were already tight because of higher demand from economic reopening, have reportedly depleted even more, with no sign of relief ahead.

The rise in fuel costs is expected to persist throughout the busy summer driving season. 


-o0o-


In order to avoid trouble in the social media, may I respectfully suggest the following: 

1. BE HUMBLE. Refrain from feeling “sikat” (famous), special, and important. Let’s always plant our feet on the ground by showing that we belong. No one should be superior. “Ownership” of a Facebook account is not a special power or privilege. We are all at the beck and mercy of the Facebook administrator who has the authority to terminate our account if we misbehave.  

2. DON’T EMBARRASS OTHERS. If we don’t like or don’t agree with the comments or posts of others especially on topics about religion and politics, let’s not embarrass them. All opinions matter. We must avoid provocative and insulting comments. Don’t do to others what we wouldn’t want others do unto us. Respect begets respect. We can’t win an argument if we use bullying tactics. We don’t have the exclusive franchise to humiliate others; if we do, expect a retaliation and a slanderous brawl.

3. BE NICE; BE DECENT. Let’s use the social media to foster camaraderie and win friends (especially those we haven’t met in person but were always commenting on our walls). Let’s avoid the use of expletives and hurting words, if possible. If we have nothing good to say or post, post or say nothing. Just in case we inadvertently forget to “like” good and kind comments, let’s always reply with a “thank you.”

4. NO CURSING, PLEASE. If we have a domestic spat with our partners, children, parents, officemates, employers, employees; if we disagree with our electric and phone bills, let’s not declare an Armageddon in the social media. Let’s protect the social media’s internal ecosystem with a quality and above-board interaction; let’s not poison the Facebook community with laser-laced profanities if we are galit sa mundo (mad at the universe).

5. DON’T GOSSIP; DON’T SOW INTRIGUE. Gossiping and sowing of intrigues are the No. 1 killers of friendship, goodwill, and peace of mind; the No. 1 promoters of feud, bedlam, deep-seated strife in the social media. Let’s altogether discard and detest them.

(The author, who is now based in New York City, used to be the editor of two local dailies in Iloilo.—Ed)


Friday, June 10, 2022

How to avoid trouble in social media

“The trouble with a kitten is that eventually it becomes a cat.”

Ogden Nash


By Alex P. Vidal


IN order to avoid trouble in the social media, may I respectfully suggest the following: 

1. BE HUMBLE. Refrain from feeling “sikat” (famous), special, and important. Let’s always plant our feet on the ground by showing that we belong. No one is superior here. “Ownership” of a Facebook account is not a special power or privilege. We are all at the beck and mercy of the Facebook administrator who has the authority to terminate our account if we misbehave.  

2. DON’T EMBARRASS OTHERS. If we don’t like or don’t agree with the comments or posts of others especially on topics about religion and politics, let’s not embarrass them. All opinions matter. We must avoid provocative and insulting comments. Don’t do to others what we wouldn’t want others do unto us. Respect begets respect. We can’t win an argument if we use bullying tactics. We don’t have the exclusive franchise to humiliate others; if we do, expect a retaliation and a slanderous brawl.

3. BE NICE; BE DECENT. Let’s use the social media to foster camaraderie and win friends (especially those we haven’t met in person but were always commenting on our walls). Let’s avoid the use of expletives and hurting words, if possible. If we have nothing good to say or post, post or say nothing. Just in case we inadvertently forget to “like” good and kind comments, let’s always reply with a “thank you.”

4. NO CURSING, PLEASE. If we have a domestic spat with our partners, children, parents, officemates, employers, employees; if we disagree with our electric and phone bills, let’s not declare an Armageddon in the social media. Let’s protect the social media’s internal ecosystem with a quality and above-board interaction; let’s not poison the Facebook community with laser-laced profanities if we are galit sa mundo (mad at the universe).

5. DON’T GOSSIP; DON’T SOW INTRIGUE. Gossiping and sowing of intrigues are the No. 1 killers of friendship, goodwill, and peace of mind; the No. 1 promoters of feud, bedlam, deep-seated strife in the social media. Let’s altogether discard and detest them.


Alphabets of our spiritual literacy

"Most importantly, the meaning of spirituality lays the seeds for our destiny and the path we must follow."  

Dennis Banks 


By Alex P. Vidal


BEYOND politics, war and pandemic, there is a chance for humanity to heave a sigh of relief by reading and spreading the sacred in our everyday life.

We found this out in Spiritual Literacy, written by Frederic and Mary Ann Brussat (the book is worth $19.65 in Amazon.com and $9.95 in Google Play).

The authors give us a kaleidoscopic view, full of color and fun, of the wisdom of the ages, including our own. 

We may need this wisdom desperately, as told by Thomas Moore, in a time when information and data have taken the place of insight. 

We need opportunities such as the one presented in the book to mediate and reflect, not just to learn and act. 

And it doesn't hurt to discover how many different people of our own time are hard at work sorting through the obstacles so often associated with spiritual endeavors. 

Let me share the alphabets of Spiritual Literacy:

ATTENTION: Pay attention. Stay awake and totally alert. See with receptive eyes and discover a world of ceaseless wonders. 

BEAUTY: Walk the path of beauty. Relish and encourage its inward and outward expressions. Acknowledge the radiance of the creation. 

BEING PRESENT: Live in the present moment. Don't obsess about the past or worry about the future. All you need is right here now.

COMPASSION: Open your heart, mind, and soul to the pain and suffering in the world. Reach out to others and discover the rewards and obligations of deep feeling. 


-o0o-


CONNECTIONS: Cultivate the art of making connections. See how your life is intimately related to all life on the planet. 

DEVOTION: Express your feelings of praise and adoration through devotional practices. Pray with words and pray through your actions.

ENTHUSIASM: Celebrate life with this intoxicating passion. It adds zest to everything and helps build community. Hold nothing back.

FAITH: Recognize and accept that there is another dimension to life than what is obvious to us. Live with obstacles, doubt, and paradox, knowing that God is always present in the world.

FORGIVENESS: In both your private and public lives, discover the sweet release that comes from forgiving others. Feel the healing balm of being forgiven and of forgiving yourself.

GRACE: Accept grace and your world will be larger, deeper, richer, and fuller. Look for its intimations everywhere. Let this seed of the Giver of Life bloom in your words and deeds.

GRATITUDE: Spell out your days with a grammar of gratitude. Be thankful for all the blessings in your life.

HOPE: Let this positive and potent emotion fuel your dreams and support your service of others. Through your attitudes and actions, encourage others never to lose hope.

HOSPITALITY: Practice hospitality in a world where too often strangers are feared, enemies are hated, and the "other" is shunned. Welcome guests and alien ideas with graciousness.

IMAGINATION: Give imagination free rein in your life. Explore its images and ponder its meaning-making moments, and it will always present you with something new to be seen, felt, or made known.

JOY: Rejoice and be exceedingly glad. Find t his divine energy in your daily life and share it with others.


-o0o-


JUSTICE: Seek liberty and justice for all. Work for a free and fair world where oppression and inequality no longer exist.

KINDNESS: Let Spirit flow through you in little acts of kindness, brief words of encouragement, and manifold expressions of courtesy. These deeds will add to the planet's fund of good will.

LISTENING: Cultivate the art of deep listening in which you lean toward the world in love. All things in the universe want to be heard, as do the many voices inside us.

LOVE: Fall in love over and over again every day. Love your family, your neighbors, your enemies, and yourself. And don't stop with humans. Love animals, plants, stones, even the galaxies.

MEANING: Constantly try to discover the significance of your experiences. Seek further understandings from sacred texts and spiritual teachers.

NURTURING: Take good care of the best that is within you. Self-exploration and personal growth continue throughout our lifetimes and equip us to tend to the needs of others.

OPENNESS: Hold an open house in your heart for all people and all things. Practice empathy with others and receptiveness toward the universe.

PEACE: Protect the earth's future by promoting peace every day. Your small steps will link you with others who are combating violence in the world.

PLAY: Be playful. Express your creative spirit in spontaneity. Hurrah the pleasures of being, and let loose your laughter.

QUESTING: Savor questions and thrill to the quest. See your life as a journey that quickens your faith and deepens your soul.

REVERENCE: Practice reverence for life. The sacred is in, with, and under all the things of the world. Respond with appropriate respect and awe.


-o0o-

SHADOW: Give up trying to hide, deny, or escape from your imperfections. Listen to what your demons have to say to you.

SILENCE: Slow down. Be calm. Find a place where you can regularly practice silence. There you will find the resources to revitalize your body, mind, and soul.

TEACHERS: Be willing to learn from the spiritual teachers all around you, however unlikely or unlike you they may be. Always be a sensitive student.

TRANSFORMATION: Welcome the positive changes that are taking place in your life. Open up the windows and let in some fresh air. Wholeness and healing are waiting in the wings.

UNITY: In this age of global spirituality, respect differences but affirm commonalities. Work together with those who are trying to make the world a better place.

VISION: Practice the art of seeing the invisible. Use the wisdom of your personal visions to renew yourself and your community.

WONDER: Cultivate a vibrant curiosity and welcome the reports of your senses. The world is alive and moving toward you with rare epiphanies and wonderful surprises. Remember you are standing on holy ground.

THE MYSTERY: Accept the unknown as part of life. Don't try to unravel the profound mysteries of God, human nature, and the natural world. Love the ineffable.

YEARNING: Follow your heart's boundless desire. It takes you out of yourself and fosters an appreciation for the multidimensional pleasures of life.

YOU: Accept that you are a child of God. Sing your own song with gusto. Fulfill your mission as a copartner with the Holy One in the unfolding drama of the universe.

ZEAL: Be passionately aroused by life. Cherish every moment, honor your commitments, and treasure your kinship with all.

(The author, who is now based in New York City, used to be the editor of two local dailies in Iloilo.—Ed)


Thursday, June 9, 2022

Ex-Iloilo socialite abandons NY apartment

“At the end of the day, the goals are simple: safety and security.”

Jodi Rell


By Alex P. Vidal


A FORMER socialite from Western Visayas who has been living in New York since 2001 has abandoned her posh apartment in the Upper West Side of Manhattan for a “safer” place in New Jersey.

Her reason: “Indi na safe ang palibot” (the environment isn’t safe anymore).

The other reason given by the former socialite, of course, was “I found a cheaper flat there (NJ). Come, visit me if you have time.”

Loida (not her real name) actually wanted to “stay away” from her area “invaded” by homeless people during the pandemic in 2020. “Some of them are muggers and they are still there; their number is growing,” Loida feared.

The vast majority of the New York City's approximately 50,000 homeless people live in shelters, or about 30,000 in family shelters, and about 18,000 in shelters for single adults, according to the New York Times.

Amid the uproar on the alleged crimes committed by some homeless individuals in the area where Loida used to live, there was a “one man menace, a walking tornado of trash. They call him the ‘Can Tipper’ of the Upper East Side—and he can’t be stopped by the NYPD, homeless outreach workers or local politicians.”

Loida said for years, a homeless man has made a habit of knocking over garbage cans on a roughly 15-block stretch of Lexington Ave. around E. 80th St., frustrating business owners and residents who admit they’ve been unable to stop the near-daily mayhem.


-o0o-


Loida said she wasn’t the only Upper Manhattan resident who have decided to avoid the vicinity “for good” since 2021 when the city government “encouraged” some homeless people to live in shelters located mostly in that area. 

But only months after Loida and other residents left the “unsafe” community, newly elected Mayor Eric Adams had cleared 239 encampments of homeless people in 12 days, calling the initiatives crucial to the city’s recovery from the pandemic and to addressing perceptions that it had grown less safe.

Adams had announced that results so far were mixed on New York City’s effort to move homeless people out of the subway system and street encampments and into shelters.

Loida, citing city figures obtained from her new employer, a doctor in the West Side, confirmed that during the first four weeks of the push to clear the subways, nearly 80 people per week accepted placement in shelters, a jump from about 22 per week in January, before the mayor put his subway safety plan into effect.

“May efforts man ang bag o nga mayor pero indi gid kita ka salig sa batasan sang iban nga homeless nga naga sunod sunod sa likod ta kon gab e (The mayor is doing his efforts but we can’t trust the tendency of some of the homeless people to follow us while we were walking home at night),” complained Loida, 56.


-o0o-


Loida’s decision to abandon her old apartment in Manhattan came months before an organization and a real real estate company bought a historic hotel on Manhattan’s Upper West Side reportedly to be converted into a shelter for the seniors and homeless.

The hotel, located a block away from Loida’s former apartment, sat nearly empty for years, falling into disrepair and now it’s in the midst of a transformation.

According to Spectrum News New York, Project Find and Fairstead are turning The Park 79 Hotel into deeply affordable apartments for seniors.

“And it will be connected to services built right into the building,” said Executive Director David Gilcrest quoted by Spectrum News New York. “This really reflects the fact that you value people and the architecture just speaks of dignity.”

Soon, reports added, other boarded up hotels will also be transformed.

The latest development came as New York Gov. Kathy Hochul signed a new law June 7 which eases restrictions to allow the conversion of underutilized hotel space into permanent housing. 

It’s reportedly part of an effort to tackle the scarcity of affordable housing and the homeless crisis gripping many New Yorkers. 

Both problems were made worst by the pandemic.

Hochul, who is running for the same position she inherited from the disgraced Gov. Andrew Cuomo in the November election, announced: “As New York’s Housing crisis continues to impact families, we’re taking bold action, embracing innovative ideas and thinking outside the box to help ensure that New Yorkers can access safe, live able and quality affordable housing.”

(The author, who is now based in New York City, used to be the editor of two local dailies in Iloilo.—Ed)


Tuesday, June 7, 2022

Somebody up there saves Nonito Donaire Jr.

“Boxing is real easy. Life is much harder.”

Floyd Mayweather, Jr.


By Alex P. Vidal


FIL-AM boxing superstar Nonito “Flash” Donaire Jr. (42-7, 28 KOs) should thank his lucky stars above his WBC, WBA and IBF bantamweight unification duel against unbeaten Naoya “Monster” Inoue (23-0, 20 KOs) was halted in the second stanza in Saitama, Japan on June 7.

Had the fight, scheduled for 12 rounds, prolonged, the 39-year-old pugilist from Talibon, Bohol would have incurred a life-threatening injury.

In his age, one knockdown was fatal; two knockdowns were enough; three knockdowns would have been too much—especially if he was decked by a lethal punch with the impact and sound of a dynamite.

In boxing, if a fighter has been downed by a solid punch on the face it meant he was in bad shape when he went down.

Fighters of Donaire’s caliber normally kiss the canvas only after absorbing a punishment from a barrage of punches. 

In the first round against the Japanese “Monster”, the Filipino champion fell from Inoue’s wicked right in the last 10 seconds that landed with a murderous collision.

The referee’s decision to halt the potential criminal act was superb and laudable.

God must be merciful He didn’t allow quality athletes like Donaire Jr. to bow out from the breathtaking race with their faculties dismantled beyond repair. 


-o0o-


The unification bout would have ended by a first round knockout win for the smaller but more durable and younger Inoue, 28.

But Donaire Jr., with vengeance in his heart and mind after losing to the same charismatic Japanese dynamo by 12-round unanimous decision (117–109, 116–111, and 114-113) on November 8, 2019 also in Japan, was saved by the bell.

It turned out the first round knockdown was a portent of things to come for the deteriorating Donaire Jr.

In the second round, Team Inoue smelled blood and egged the “Monster” to pressure the “Flash” and chase the Filipino visitor from pillar to post with thunderous left hooks and right straights to the face.

Still hurt and confused, Donaire Jr tried to mount a kamikaze attack but couldn’t stop on his tracks the aggressive hometown favorite who charged in and swarmed over the dazed Filipino bantamweight hero like a house on fire.

Lady luck smiled at Inoue as he accelerated his attack and finally landed a vicious left hook followed by a flurry of heavy and accurate shots to Donaire’s face who collapsed and wasn’t anymore allowed to participate in the contest at 1:24 of the second round.


-o0o-


Inoue, who tipped the scale at 118, unified the WBC, WBA and IBF bantamweight belts and didn’t disappoint the partisan crowd.

The Filipino “Flash”, who weighed in at 117.5, impaired to his seventh defeat, with two KOs.

“I intended to be one-sidedly victorious like this. I did it,” screamed the jubilant Inoue, currently regarded as one of the greatest fighters in Japan in the class of Fighting Harada, Hiroki Ioka, and Jiro Watanabe

There was nothing to feel bad about for Donaire Jr., who is actually up for retirement. Like Senator Manny Pacquiao, he has given the world of boxing some of the most memorable performances that earned him a “Fighter of the Year” plum during his salad days.

In 2007, Donaire Jr. became the first prizefighter to inflict tremendous punishment on arrogant and undefeated world flyweight champion Vic Darchinyan scoring a spectacular one-punch fifth round disposal.

He repeated the trick in the rematch with a ninth round knockout to permanently silence the loud-mouthed Armenian in November 2013.

After a series of lackluster performances that prompted some well-meaning fans and experts to question his decision to keep on fighting while Father Time has beckoned, Donaire Jr. pulled a king-sized surprise by bagging the WBC bantanweight crown with a masterful fourth-round KO win against Nordine Oubaali in Carson, California on May 21, 2021 when he was already 38.

The disaster in Saitama might put an abrupt end on Donaire Jr.’s amazing professional career.  

(The author, who is now based in New York City, used to be the editor of two local dailies in Iloilo.—Ed)






 


Monday, June 6, 2022

Why more Pinoy fans root for Warriors over Celtics

“My dream was to be in the NBA. I wasn't really focused on being a star player on a team. I just wanted to make it to the NBA. I've been blessed for the opportunities to be in the Finals, been in the playoffs ever since I've been in the NBA.” James Harden


By Alex P. Vidal


OF the 426,225 Asians living in Massachusetts, 13,540 are Filipinos.

On the other hand, there are 3.4 Filipino Americans living in California.

Thus it is not surprising if more Filipinos in the United States and in other parts of the globe, perhaps, are overwhelmingly rooting for the Golden State Warriors.

But many Pinoy fans in New York still prefer Boston to win this year’s NBA championship. Some of them even bet heavily for Boston and upped the ante in Game 2 after Boston’s head-turning Game 1 dominance.    

Elsewhere in other states, however, Pinoy fans continued to be head-over-heels for Stephen Curry, Nemanja Bjelica, Drymond Green, Andre Iguodala, and Gary Payton II as manifested by their reactions when the Warriors avenged the Game 1 loss in the Bay Area on June 5.

In the 2022 NBA Finals, Pinoy cage fans are cheering for Boston Celtics mainly because of Jayson Tatum, Jaylen Brown, and Marcus Smart.

They were instrumental in the Celtics’ nerve-tingling 120-108 Game 1 conquest of The Warriors in the same home court on June 2.

“Watching the triumvirate of Tatum, Brown and Smart in the finals is a big boost not only for the NBA championship against any rival (the Golden State Warriors) but also for the league,” said Fil-Am Nemrod Go-Tung, a Boston fan from Capas, Tarlac who grew up in Hartford, Connecticut.

Go-Tung, son of a Fil-Am industrialist of Chinese descent, coaches some kids—the future Jayson Tatums and Jaylen Browns—aged 10 to 16 in Bridgeport and Waterbury.


-o0o-


Keith Smith, meanwhile, collected some take aways from Game 2 after The Warriors avenged the Game 1 loss, 107-88, to level the series.

Before Game 7 of the Eastern Conference Finals, Boston Celtics guard Derrick White said “If it was easy, it wouldn’t be us.”

That now applies to the 2022 NBA Finals too, Smith said.

The Golden State Warriors again used a big third quarter to launch themselves to a big lead. This time around, there was no letup in the fourth quarter.

Simply put, this one was over early, Smith pointed out.

The third quarter was where the wheels came off, but the problems were evident earlier than that. We’ll cover all of it, as we attempt to pick up the pieces after a blowout.

“We wrote before the game the series started that third quarters would be a bellwether. The Warriors are one of the NBA’s best third-quarter teams,” Smith said. “They regularly come out from the break and either turn games around or turn them into runaways.”


-o0o-


The Celtics trend towards the opposite, observed Smith.

In Game 1, Golden State outscored Boston 38-24 in the third to take a 12-point lead into the fourth quarter.

In Game 2, the Warriors outscored the Celtics 35-14 immediately after halftime to take a 23-pont lead into the fourth quarter.

As they morphed into the NBA’s best team in 2022, it seemed like Boston had figured out the third quarter thing. They were the ones coming out of the locker room and taking control of games. It even became a bit of a running joke that Ime Udoka must be delivering some incredible halftime speeches, Smith added.

In the playoffs, that’s seemed to reverse a bit, for whatever reason.

Bouncing back is a great trait to have. Relying on it quite as much as the Celtics do is concerning, especially when it’s in-game.

Ultimately, Boston lost by 19 points, but that was after a final period that was mostly garbage time. The pre-garbage time margin was consistently around 22-25 points.

Helping the Warriors get there were a whopping 33 points off 19 Boston turnovers. Cut those numbers in half, and it’s a different ballgame.

“We don’t need to go over the numbers from the entire playoff run to state the following: When the Celtics turn the ball over a lot, they lose. When they don’t, they win,” Smith observed.

“Is that overly simplifying things? Perhaps. But sometimes basketball is a pretty simple game. This is as good a spot as any to address the officiating.”

The Celtics didn’t lose because of the refereeing.  You don’t get down by as many as 29 points because of the way the game is being called.


-o0o-


There were sharp—and sometimes irrational—reactions to our recent article coming from die hards of Vice President-elect Sara Duterte-Carpio after we appealed to the good daughter of the outgoing President Rodrigo Duterte not to be harsh against the critical press, or to refrain from making a knee-jerk reaction each time the press addresses certain problems, wrongdoings and shortcomings related to her function as a public official.

It’s dangerous if an elected or even appointed public official doesn’t know the limits of his or her job; or he or she doesn’t understand the role being played by critical press in nation-building.

They think a media critic is out to destroy them or embarrass them because the commentary isn’t favorable. 

Such is the mentality of Ruel Pacquiao, the brother of Sen. Manny Pacquiao and incumbent Saranggani congressman who will soon sit as governor of the province. 

I will write about this incident and Rep. Ruel Pacquiao’s behavior in a separate article. 

(The author, who is now based in New York City, used to be the editor of two local dailies in Iloilo.—Ed)