• Madder Packing Hilaryus
    Oct 1 2022

    When we think of the ties that bind us, a nation of disparate people separated by seas and straits, spread out among 7,107 islands and speaking over 70 different languages and dialects, we tend to home in on food, religion and kinship. But perhaps the one thing we really all can relate to is good old Pinoy humor. Sometimes mababaw, often a clever play of words, our humor is side-splittingly punny and funny. It’s just da bess!

    Flipping Pinoy humor with us is the legendary Rex Navarrete, one of the first Fil-Am comedians to become a mainstream international comedy sensation. He talks with surprising candor about how laughter heartens, heals, and humbles — not to mention unites — both audience and comic. Life is hard for many Filipinos. And whether you’re an immigrant in the US, or a Pinoy at home trying to get through the daily grind, laughter becomes the balm that keeps us sane. Tawa nalang ng tawa!

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    1 hr and 16 mins
  • Where All The Pinoys At??
    Sep 10 2022

    Hospitals, airports, cruise ships ... Filipinos are EVERYWHERE. So why are we nowhere? Or why has it taken this long for us to appear, as us, as Filipinos on TV shows and in movies? We chat with two industry experts — one running the show and another facing the audience — about why we need to create our own stories and support our storytellers. Flipping all the narratives with us are director, Diversity, Equity, Inclusion and Belonging consultant, and veteran entertainment and media policy expert Cris Sales and Victor Lirio, critically acclaimed actor and theatre director specializing in text-based impact theatre, who, before the pandemic, was working at the Old Vic/National Theatre in London.

    They raise important questions of identity and visibility, how we see ourselves and how we want to be seen. So we’re on the hunt: nasaan nanga ba ang mga Pinoy? We need to be onscreen, definitely, but we should have a seat at the decision-making table, too.

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    1 hr and 40 mins
  • Don't Stop Believin'
    Jun 25 2022

    Girl can’t help it, she needs to tell stories. Ramona Diaz, the award-winning documentary filmmaker, has brought to the screen some of the most disturbing, heart-rending, inspiring and ultimately illuminating tales of the Filipino experience - the fearless journalist facing a lying and vindictive president (A Thousand Cuts), an unknown cover singer with incredible vocals who fronts a legendary rock band (Don’t Stop Believin’: Every Man’s Journey) teachers recruited to teach in inner city schools in Baltimore (The Learning), a delusional former First Lady (Imelda), and more.

    She sits down with us to flip the notion of love of country, likening the draw of the motherland to the lure of an ex-boyfriend: we don’t stop believin’ but he still keeps on disappointin’ … so where do we go from here without shattering our psyche? Or further widening the polarizations in our society? Sometimes all we need is a welcome shot of babaw Pinoy humor.

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    1 hr and 34 mins
  • Return Of The Comeback
    Jun 11 2022

    We took a break. It was unplanned. Like many Filipinos, we needed a moment. The last elections were ... something. There are certain things — like the party line, hours of zero electricity, mullets, "salvaging" (the martial law euphemism for extrajudicial killing), and martial law itself — that just shouldn't make a comeback. Yet here we are: back with not one, not two, but three of our history's more controversial leaders back in power. We find ourselves celebrating Filipino Independence Day (and our first year anniversary!) with all sorts of feels. In this episode, we flip and flip again (sometimes frenetically, like oxygen-deprived tilapia on a bangka), trying to make sense of where we are and where we're going, and committed to finding hope and a way forward.

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    1 hr and 11 mins
  • The Young & The Restless
    Apr 24 2022

    Children in the Philippines are often raised to be obedient and respectful; independence of thought and purpose is unfortunately not as vigorously encouraged. But times they are a-changing. As a demographic, Gen Zs and Millennials have an outsize significance in this election: they comprise 56% of the electorate. It’s no wonder candidates have been assiduously courting their vote. But how else can young Filipinos make their voices heard? Flipping the idea that our youth are timid and quiet are two young women, Yanna Garcia and Katya Lichauco, co-editors of Big Deal (get your copy now: bit.ly/BigDealPreOrder!), a groundbreaking anthology of writing and art by and about young Filipinas and their daily struggles, challenges, traumas and triumphs. They have spoken, and now we listen.

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    1 hr and 20 mins
  • Otso-Bulaga-Canteen Nation!
    Apr 10 2022

    The noontime variety show is a staple of Philippine mass culture. A celebration of the kitsch and the banal, it is often a formulaic whirl of trite skits and musical entertainment marked by toilet humour and even lewd asides with anti-intellectual bent. To be fair, it has at times been a platform from which unexpected singing superstars have emerged. But how have decades of this Eat Bulaga sort of lunchtime diet impacted Filipinos as thinkers and, more importantly, voters? TV gave America Trump; it gave Ukraine Zelensky. What about the Philippines? 

    Flipping with us are veteran award-winning journalist Ces Drilon and one-third of the famed OPM (Original Pilipino Music) pioneer APO Hiking Society, Jim Paredes, who once upon a time hosted a noontime variety show. Mula Aparri hangang Jolo, is it just “that’s entertainment”?

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    55 mins
  • EDSA WRAP... or is it?
    Mar 26 2022

    It was the revolution that stunned the world. Millions of Filipinos managing to oust — without a single drop of blood shed — a brutal dictator who ruled for 20 years that included glory days, torture, and killings? For a brief, shining moment, the Philippines was the inspiration of the world. Almost 40 years later, what does EDSA mean? In this episode, we flip with veteran journalist and author of The House on Calle Sombra, Marga Ortigas, and businessman, non-profit champion, and writer of Philippine politics, culture, history and identity, Nik Skalomenos de Ynchausti. What was EDSA for Filipinos and the world? Why was it glorious? Where did we fail? And more importantly, how do we channel the same courage and hope to accomplish revolutionary change?

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    1 hr and 22 mins
  • Holding The Line
    Mar 12 2022

    It’s not every day that we have a Nobel Prize winner as a guest flipper. Award-winning journalist, icon of press freedom and all-around badass Maria Ressa talks about fighting for truth, navigating a sea of trolls on a raft of facts, fending off death by a thousand cuts, not to mention finishing a new book, launching #factsfirstph - all while never losing hope for the country we all love. A little moaning every now and then helps, too!

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    59 mins