Showing posts with label Journalist. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Journalist. Show all posts

Saturday, January 25, 2014

Filipino journalist assaulted, fights for life

New York City -- Members of the Filipino community in New York are asking the public to step up any information to aid the NY police who are currently probing the assault of theater journalist Randy Gener.  The young multi-talented writer, actor, director, and teacher is now fighting for his life in a local hospital.


Anyone with more information is asked to come forward, and provide information to active case file #485, under Detective Ervis at the 18th Precinct at (212) 767-8400.




[caption id="attachment_2712" align="aligncenter" width="300"]Gener reciting the poem he wrote in honor of his late grandfather at the Philippine Center in October 2013. Gener reciting the poem he wrote in honor of his late grandfather at the Philippine Center in October 2013.[/caption]

Gener was attacked on January 17, before 4 o’clock in the morning after leaving a party in midtown Manhattan. He was found in the vicinity of 7th Avenue, near 54th and 55th Streets. He is said to have suffered severe head trauma, for which he went through surgery and is currently in a neuro ICU.


The Gener family believes that he could be a victim of hate crime, because nothing was taken from his possession.


A member of the Catholic Church has expressed alarm over the case of Gener, and asked authorities for swift justice.  “We cannot allow a Filipino member of the LGBT to be a victim of hate. Let’s bring the perpetrators to justice,” Fr. Julian Jagudilla, Parochial Vicar of the Church of St. Francis of Assisi and director of the Migrant Center at the Church of St. Francis of Assisi told members of the Filipino American Press Club of New York.


The Philippine Consulate has directly contacted the NYPD to follow-up on the investigation on the Gener assault. A prayer vigil will be held on Sunday, January 26 at the Philippine Center on 5th Avenue at 6 o’clock in the evening.


OSM! online magazine had featured Gener in a cultural event dubbed as Linggo ng Wika held at the Philippine Consulate in Manhattan where he delivered poems by renowned Filipino poets as well as his own compositions.


Gener is an editor, social media expert, accomplished writer and critical thinker with 10 years of experience leading, directing, managing and editing news, features and narrative content for print publications, new media and interactive digital projects. He has reported and written for National Public Radio, New York Times, Star Ledger, Village Voice, New York Daily News, Crain's New York Business, International Herald Tribune, Time Out New York, New York Magazine, Film Society of Lincoln Center, and others in Asia and Europe.


He is also a lecturer on American studies, U.S. politics and foreign affairs, cultural diplomacy and international relations, journalism and criticism, design and performance, arts and entertainment, and the impact of new technology on narrative architectures.

Thursday, March 21, 2013

A JOURNALIST METAMORPHOSES Excerpts from BITING THE BIG APPLE

[caption id="attachment_1673" align="aligncenter" width="242"]On love day, buy a faithful shirt for her and you, for the price of ONE! On love day, buy a faithful shirt for her and you, for the price of ONE![/caption]

[caption id="attachment_1837" align="alignleft" width="300"]Cebu at dusk Cebu at dusk[/caption]

By Marivir R. Montebon
New York City

In the early years of my profession, I realized how powerful being a journalist could truly be. I can talk to anyone to gather information and opinion, in the name of public service! I took pride (and most often fret) in having been able to interview then city mayor Tomas Osmena, who had a very candid and domineering demeanor, one cannot ask ‘silly’ questions or lest be insulted publicly.

On certain occasions, I interviewed Presidents Corazon Aquino and Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo.

It seemed like the experiences were feathers in the hat.

429758_10151557303754402_346159266_nSomewhere along the way, however, I got jaded as a journalist. I had been reporting and writing nothing much but bad news. Politicians, most of the time, are nothing but a bunch of liars and baby kissers during elections. Heinous and petty crimes remain unresolved and whitewashed.

In a country like mine especially, media have promoted the culture of victimization and oppression as a standard criteria for news reporting.

It had been too overwhelming and counter productive because it molded the mindset of hopelessness, resignation, and mendicancy.

I remember how I had vigorously covered a story on land reform, which landed on my lap when I was pregnant with my daughter. The farmers were living in the hills of the southern part of the city and were to be evicted because the land was to be developed into an 18-hole golf course.

I began following the story and reporting about it regularly, from the time their houses were razed to the ground by bulldozers, and how they resisted them using their limbs.

The farmers went to court too. Together with lawyers, they argued that the land is under land reform and that it should not be superseded by a local ordinance for economic development.

The feisty leader, the late Benito Abellar, became a favorite of the media, because of his eloquence and sharpness. He would always say to the judges and the media, how could you make the land that is productive with food and life for us farmers, into a playground for the rich.

And so the land dispute continued for years. Until I gave birth, until Nikki went to school, and finally until she was in Grade 3 at age nine.

The farmers were eventually uprooted from the land which was converted into a sprawling golf course. They were given several million pesos in damage compensation, and a relocation site where they could live, but the land was not fit for farming. The farmers effectively became part of the urban poor population in Cebu. The fight was a long and brave nine years.

To a journalist like me, the farmers were defeated, and the morals of society as well. It was a long bloody story that I wrote (as two farmers were shot by hired assassins of the land owner) that ended in their obscurity anyway.

There are many other stories which I covered that meant a lot of heartaches for me. Not that I want to hide from the painful truth when I decided to strike a balance between good news and bad news.

I just believe that media practitioners must also be heralds for hope, and amplifiers of good deeds in the hope that many will be emboldened to do good. Hence in the subsequent years, I found respite in the sections of lifestyle and business, which somehow reflected some sense of action for progress in the community and national lives of people.

Despite the sad and horrific stories of wars and human misery, I know there are many people doing good things in a silent way. For me, journalism has to chronicle these good deeds too. It is about time that inspiring, positive journalism gains ground. After several years of being jaded, I take on this philosophy and put it into practice in my own OSM! magazine.

(Please get an eBook, please go to Amazon.com's Kindle store  http://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/B00BHKHC9O/ref=mp_s_a_1?qid=1361241214&sr=8-6&pi=SL75 . Priced at $9.80, part of the proceeds go to the OSM! Educational Support Program)

[caption id="attachment_1675" align="aligncenter" width="300"]Xocai Dark Chocolate: it is a healthy love. Xocai Dark Chocolate: It is a healthy love.[/caption]

Wednesday, March 6, 2013

FEATURED: OSM! Editor to Speak at New York Writers Forum

By Leani M. Auxilio

New York City

[caption id="attachment_1851" align="alignleft" width="300"]OSM! editor Marivir R. Montebon to share OSM! experience to NY writers in April. OSM! editor Marivir R. Montebon to share OSM! experience to NY writers in April.[/caption]

[caption id="attachment_1850" align="alignleft" width="300"]Shindig's Yusang Lee in NWU-NY's March forum for writers. Beside him is Tim Sheard, NWU-NY who puts the monthly event together. Shindig's Yusang Lee in NWU-NY's March forum for writers. Beside him is Tim Sheard, NWU-NY who puts the monthly event together.[/caption]

OSM! executive editor and publisher Marivir R. Montebon will speak before New York writers in a monthly forum sponsored by the National Writers Union - New York Chapter on how to effectively build and market one's website. Her online magazine, OSM! (awesome) has garnered over 20,000 in readers and viewers on its 10th month of existence in cyberspace, a record recognized by blogging platform WordPress as impressive and one of the most heavily read websites for 2012.

The forum titled, "For a Great Website, Content is King," will be on April 8, Monday, at 6:30 PM, at Ben's Restaurant in mid-Manhattan.

An author, television host and online producer, Montebon will explain how she has built her web site into an internationally recognized place to visit. Participant writers will learn in the forum how to build their brand and attract viewers to their site with tantalizing, relevant content.

In March 2012, Montebon was given the Woman in Media/Journalism award by the New Jersey-based Pan-American Concerned Citizens Alliance. Montebon also serves as managing editor of the Migrant Heritage Chronicle, a community paper based in Washington, DC.

She has three published books. Her debut work, published in 2000, is entitled "Retracing our Roots: A Journey into Cebu's Precolonial and Colonial Past;" the second book, published in 2007, is entitled "Beyond the Seed Money". It is about successful women micro-entrepreneurs in Cebu. Her third, most recent book, is titled "Biting the Big Apple: Memoirs of a Journalist Turned Immigrant" which is self-published and available at Amazon.com.

On its March monthly forum, Yusang Lee, marketing manager for Shindig, explained to writer participants at the NWU Forum how they can host video chats with multiple participants around the world in real time, at practically no cost, using Shindig as a platform.

A thousand fans, prospects, clients can gather in one place for an interactive video chat such as book launches, presentations, press events, meet and greets, and all types of promotional activities through Shindig. These interactive internet sessions allow participants to watch and listen to a program, and to submit questions and chat with the speaker in real time.

Lee said a Shindig encourages audience engagement by allowing members of the community to talk to one another while interacting with one's brand or listening to one's live presentation, without the cost, administrative time, and effort.

Shindig is a NYC start-up committed to unleashing the unrealized potential of a video chat for an online group of 50 to 1000, founded in 2009 by Yale College, Harvard Law graduate Steve Gottlieb.

The NWU monthly writers forum is put together by NWU treasurer and webmaster Tim Sheard, a novelist and writer of the Lenny Moss mystery novels and Cat Burglar crime films.

(Shindig could be reached www.shindig.com

For forum details, please visit www.nwuny.org)

Sunday, May 6, 2012

An Afternoon with Ninotchka Rosca

BY MARIVIR MONTEBON

With the way the weather behaves these days – extremely changeable and swift in a matter of 24 hours – having a pleasant day could just be considered a miracle. The afternoon of mid-April when I first met celebrated Filipino writer Ninotchka Rosca was blessedly pleasant – warm and sunny. It was one of my longest interviews as well, as it was over late lunch in a Filipino restaurant in Queens. I purposely ordered a train of Filipino desserts, for it was a celebration that finally, I met the Ninotchka Rosca.

Ms. Rosca is a two-time recipient of the New York Foundation for the Arts Fellowship and frequent contributor to The Village Voice, the Huffington Post, Q, Ms. Magazine, and other US and European periodicals. She authored six books, which includes two bestselling novels, The State of War and Twice Blessed which won the 1993 American Book Award for Excellence in Literature.

Born and raised in Manila, Ms. Rosca studied Comparative Literature and Khmer Civilization at the University of the Philippines.
She founded and was the first chairperson of Gabriela Network, a US-based organization of women and women’s rights advocates which supported the Philippine women’s movement.

A human rights activist at the perilous time of Philippine dictator Ferdinand Marcos, Ms. Rosca was forced into self-exile when she was threatened a second arrest. She now lives in New York.

But as one would always say, you bring your convictions wherever you are. She was and is still in the thick of organizing and educating women and men into the fold of gender equality and ethics. She has been in vital positions with Amnesty International and the Pen American Center and was actively involved in the Beijing International Women’s Conference.

She is one of the 12 Asian American Women of Hope designated by the Bread and Roses Cultural Project, considered to be role models of youth for their commitment and compassion for change.

Currently busy with AF3IRM, a New York-based organization of women and handful of writing projects, Ms. Rosca continues to be relentless.

[caption id="attachment_617" align="alignright" width="300"] "They each paid me 5 centavos to read aloud periodicals and comic books -- which likely made me conclude that one could make a living doing what I already liked."[/caption]

1. What inspired you to be a writer?

When did you begin to write in the professional sense? I learned to read and write at a very early age, around 5 or 6 years -- and by that I don't mean the usual way children read/write. I was reading college level books, like Cervantes's Don Quixote, etc. Also, the neighborhood domestic help found out I could read/write, so they'd buy comic books, Liwayway and other periodicals and made me read aloud to them in the afternoon when their bosses were asleep. They each paid me 5 centavos -- which likely made me conclude that one could make a living doing what I already liked. I remember writing a poem when I was 7 years old, about galaxies. But my first paid publication occurred when I was 12 years old. Never looked back from then.

2. Who are the writers that you love/respect and regard as models/mentors?

There are thousands of writers I respect enough to read their books over and over again. Can't say I "love" them but I do take pleasure, aesthetically and philosophically speaking, from specific books: all the classics, of course, from the Homeric epics to the Tibetan Book of the Dead, Upanishads, even the Bible; then works by Tolstoy, Babel, Gogol, Dostyevsky and a host of others; plus among the contemporary writers, Le Guinn's The Left Hand of Darkness; Murakami's Kafka on the Shore;Pamuk's Red; then the Latin American writers: Belli, Garcia Marquez, Puig, etc. Just too many to name. I don't regard anyone as a model or mentor. I did learn a lot about writing techniques from Thomas Mann's Buddenbrooks & the Magic Mountain.

3. The name Ninotchka Rosca is already a brand name in writing, how did you develop your craft? What attitude should there be to become an accomplished writer?

I am my harshest critic. When my name goes on something that's to be published, the thing usually goes through many, many revisions plus months and sometimes years of intellection.

4. What projects (books/events) are coming up soon with you in the US and the Philippines?

I am trying to finish several short stories plus one long manuscript on the firefly.

5. You are also a women's rights advocate, a prime mover in the women's movement, how do you see the women's movement in the Philippines and the US (compare or contrast) in terms of truly responding to the essential needs of women for growth and recognition? You can cite flaws please, and challenges that have to be dealt with.

The basic difference between the US-based and Philippine-based is simply this: the first is concerned with expanding the definition/scope of rights, privileges and freedoms toward the achievement of comprehensive equality for women. The second is concerned with re-gaining the basic rights, privileges and freedoms lost to colonialism/imperialism toward the achievement of national self-determination. In the focus on the national paradigm, the importance of absolute comprehensive equality for women is often neglected.

[caption id="attachment_618" align="alignleft" width="300"] If you check the projected map of the world after a complete polar melt, there is no Philippines.[/caption]

6. Is there hope for the Philippines to be able to release itself from material poverty and cultural malaise? How? And in what manner are you contributing to it?

The effort to liberate the Philippines from material poverty and cultural malaise, as you call it, is in a race with global warming and the polar meltdown, which is already starting. If you check the projected map of the world after a complete polar melt, there is no Philippines.

7. Who/what inspires you to write and continue to be an active part of the women's movement?
I don't know what -- inspires is not the right word -- compels me to write. Maybe the certainty that I am good at it. I am compelled to remain active in the women's movement since this is still an open dynamic field of intellection, its ideology has NOT yet congealed and been reduced to citing texts from a hundred years ago. Plus it's really fun to watch the development of young women from timid, romance-ridden creatures to self-aware and self-confident beings who can strut, if need be, with the best of them.

8. A writer has certain quirks, what do you do prior to writing and focusing on it to beat your deadline? Tons of coffee? Impeccable cleaning up of your desk? Yoga?

I have to be physically fine, so my mind can let go of paying attention to my body. But writing or not, I do yoga, clean up the apartment periodically, have coffee, walk the dog. I really have no special rituals to writing as this is so naturally part of me it's like breathing.

9. Describe yourself as a mother and a no nonsense woman.

I can't describe myself as a mother as I have not experienced myself as a mother. I've been told I have been a horrible one -- which by others' standards is probably true, since I'm really not sentimental. All I say is that I've never been violent, physically or verbally; have always been logical and given logical explanations; and never tried to dominate, which does not necessarily mean I lose sight of my own needs and wants. My only wish has been for the other to be able to stand on his/her own feet and thus render my presence unnecessary. That of course is the rule by which I manage all other relationships.

[caption id="attachment_616" align="aligncenter" width="300"] I don't know what -- inspires is not the right word -- compels me to write. Maybe the certainty that I am good at it.[/caption]