Tuesday, October 03, 2000

my 2-cents on Singapore Pinoys upset by bad news from home


I just feel upset with how people reacted to the Probe team feature. I'm not

much of a writer so I may not really be able to use the right words to relay

how strongly i feel against these people who complained about the feature!

    

I agree that this type of feature shouldn't be shown outside Phippines, it

would dissuade foreign investments.  What I'm so outraged about is the

reaction of the Pinoys, how apathetic and heartless to be complaining about

something so trivial.

    

Why are we so concerned with our image to foreigners when the real issue

here is the pityful plight of the Filipinos back home towards a good life???

  It's so alarming how the filipinos just zoomed in on the effect of the

feature to the Filipino image, not even bothering to feel and understand the

real issue of Filipinos.  This kind of reaction has just proven that we,

Filipinos don't see ourselves as one nation but as people living in one

country.  For these OCWs, now that they've achieved a good life, they don't

seem to be concerned anymore with their fellow pinoys who're left in the

Phils.  I mean, PROBE is talking about child abuse, prostitution, and all

they can come up with is pinoy image!

    

And it also came as such a surprise that this type of reaction has "earned"

itself a place in the Inquirer headline!

    

I'm not really usually this patriotic, but I just got so affected by this,

how worse we really are...  I hope that with my amateurish effort to write

this awareness essay, i was able to get others to be conscious of what is

going on, to be sympathetic.  At least that's a first step....

ARTICLE:

     actual article (28 sept 2000):

     FILIPINO organizations in Singapore believe that segments of "The
     Probe Team" featuring "negative" stories on the Philippines should not
     be shown abroad, specifically in that city-state, because they give a
     bad impression of the motherland.
    
     The Filipino expatriates are upset over the TV program, "Gateway Asia:
     The Probe Team," which is shown on prime time every Monday on Channel
     News Asia, with replays on Monday night and Tuesday afternoon.
    
     The 30-minute program runs two to three "Probe Team" segments, and the
     Filipinos in Singapore resent the fact that these feature mostly
     problems on child labor, prostitution, and poverty.
    
     The program has resulted in a "lopsided presentation of the
     Philippines: a country of problems, problems, and more problems," they
     said in a letter to the Kapisanan ng mga Brodkaster ng Pilipinas.
    
     Signatories to the letter include the Filipino Overseas Workers of
     Singapore, Filipino Association of Singapore, Filipino Catholic
     Community of Singapore, and Overseas Filipinos and Friends Work for
     Unity and Dignity.
   
     "The Probe Team" is a long-running independently produced news
     magazine program that is shown on GMA-7. It has received a number of
     local and international awards.
    
     GMA-7, through its arm GMA Worldwide, sells "Probe Team" episodes to
     Channel News Asia, which decides on what segments it will air in
     Singapore.
    
     Among the "negative" segments cited by the Filipinos were those
     featuring children who earn a living by selling sampaguita garlands,
     pushing trolleys on railway tracks, picking up discarded fish in
     Navotas, and working in sugarcane fields in Negros.
    
     There were also segments on fraternity hazing, the impact of the San
     Roque Dam on tribal Filipinos living in the area, pedophilia, the
     alleged irregular disbursement of sweepstakes funds, and the Irisan
     dump in Baguio.
    
     E-mails
     The protesting Filipinos have bombarded "The Probe Team" with e-mail,
     blaming it for the content of the Singapore TV program. They said
     there was no point in showing these negative features abroad.
    
     Among their comments were:

     * "Don't wash dirty linen in public."
    
     * "Our problems should be for Philippine consumption only."
   
     * "We must keep our self-respect and pride."
    
     * "What image does the 'Probe Team' want to project to foreigners?"
    
     They also said these episodes only added to the "humiliation" they
     were suffering abroad. They cited the case of a 5-year-old daughter of
     a Filipino expatriate who, after viewing "Gateway Asia: The Probe
     Team," refused to call herself a Filipina and declared that she did
     not want to visit the Philippines because it was "dirty, dark, and not
     safe."
    
     One e-mail said that while "The Probe Team" should be encouraged to
     raise the awareness of Filipinos on issues at home, this should be
     "for Philippine consumption only."
    
     Another said the negative impact of the program would further
     encourage Singaporean employers to abuse their Filipino employees.
    
     There are about 120,000 registered Filipino workers in Singapore. Of
     these, about 80,000 are domestics.

     No offense meant
     "The Probe Team" executive producer Nessa Valdellon said the program
     never intended to offend Filipinos overseas in any way.
   
     She said its episodes, mostly investigative pieces, were intended to
     inform Filipinos at home about the problems facing the country, and
     were not really targeted at Filipinos living abroad.
     "The episodes just reflect what is going on in the country, and it so
     happens that there is poverty, there is war, there is child labor
     here," she said.
    
     Valdellon said the reaction of the Filipinos in Singapore were a
     surprise to "The Probe Team" because it had always claimed the
     responsibility of exposing corruption in the government and problems
     relating to poverty, child labor and other issues.
    
     She said Filipinos in the United States had been persistently
     requesting the showing of episodes there because "they want so much to
     know what's happening here in the Philippines."
    
     "The Probe Team" does not have control over what episodes will be
     shown in Singapore because the contract is between Channel News Asia
     and GMA Worldwide.
   
     The program occasionally features a "good news" segment in some of its
     local episodes, but Channel News Asia has not shown this.
   
     What the Filipinos in Singapore want is for "The Probe Team" and GMA-7
     to retain editorial rights over their programs sold abroad. They want
     negative stories balanced with positive ones, like features on
     successful overseas Filipino workers and tourist places like Subic and
     Cebu.
    
     They cited other "Gateway Asia" programs featuring India, Hong Kong,
     Japan and Korea, which, they noted, contained both positive and
     negative stories.
     
     Plugs
     Darlene Dimaano, GMA Worldwide assistant vice president for
     distribution, said it had also received negative feedback from the
     Filipinos in Singapore.
    
     She said this actually stemmed from the plugs that Channel News Asia
     showed for "Gateway Asia: The Probe Team," featuring two Filipino
     women, one an alcoholic who wanted to commit suicide, and another
     whose sons had turned to prostitution.
    
     Dimaano said GMA Worldwide had taken note of the comments and relayed
     these to Channel News Asia. The Singapore TV station was urged not to
     run the plugs because these were too negative.
    
     In mid-October, GMA Worldwide will coordinate with the program staff
     in Manila to recommend features for broadcast in Singapore for the new
     season.
     "We don't want to put the Philippines in a bad light, so were now
     taking steps to strike a balance of the negative and the positive,"
     Dimaano said.

     But the program will continue to produce investigative pieces on
     "negative" issues.
     "You cannot try to sanitize things," Valdellon said. "I think
     Filipinos everywhere should know what's happening in their country."