’Bibili sana ako ng fake news’: Pinky Amador’s playful dig at ‘Ka Tunying’

Theater and TV actress Pinky Amador posted a clip about fighting fake news that prominently features a food brand associated with broadcaster Anthony ‘Ka Tunying’ Taberna.

Pinky is seen walking towards a kiosk of Ka Tunying in an undisclosed location. As she nears it, she turns to the camera while pointing at the signage, ‘Bibili sana ako ng fake news.’

‘Ingat po tayong lahat sa mga papapakin natin. Maging mapanuri sa mga balita, iwasan ang pagpapakalat ng maling impormasyon,’ she wrote on the caption of her clip uploaded on her Instagram and Facebook pages. She also used the hashtags #Satire, #LabanSaFakeNews and #KurakotIkulong.

Ka Tunying is the name of Taberna’s bakeshop chain that sells baked goods, coffee and Filipino food. It has kiosks in the malls and airports.

Taberna recently made news after his past endorsements of an insurance firm linked to the controversial contractor couple Sarah and Curlee Discaya resurfaced. The insurance firm, Stronghold Insurance Company Inc., welcomed Taberna in a 2022 Facebook post as its first endorser.

Stronghold is reportedly the provider of bonds for Discaya’s Department of Public Works and Highways’ flood control projects. The firm said in a statement it is “not privy” to the contract between the contractor and the government. It also denied any links to the Discaya couple.

Taberna also made news after saying in his vlog that Sen. Risa Hontiveros made budget insertions for infrastructure projects in this year’s proposed national budget. Hontiveros has denied the allegations.

ZUS Coffee in winning start

ZUS Coffee carved out a gritty 24-26, 25-23, 17-25, 26-24, 15-7 victory over Akari in the kickoff of the PVL Reinforced Conference at the Ynares Center in Montalban, Rizal beset by a league issue with the Philippine National Volleyball Federation.

The PVL-PNVF clash resulted to the Reinforced Conference opening minus the supposed imports.

In what became an all-Filipino duel, the Thunderbelles emerged triumphant versus the Chargers in a five-setter with Riza Nogales leading the way for the winning team with 15 points.

Also coming through were Jovelyn Gonzaga and Chinnie Arroyo, who each fired 14 hits while Fiona Ceballos, Kate Santiago and Alexis Miner contributed 13, 11 and 10 points, respectively.

In the deciding set, it was the Thunderbelles who surged with poise and precision, orchestrating a decisive 7-0 closing run to turn a shaky 8-7 edge into a runaway win.

‘Sobrang hirap mag-adjust. Parang lahat kami nangangapa kasi biglaan ‘yung balita na hindi pa pala pwedeng maglaro ang imports,’ said ZUS Coffee libero Alyssa Eroa.

No go for imports

The beautiful peace that Philippine volleyball has enjoyed the past few years has been broken.

It was breached yesterday after its two biggest stakeholders – the pro league and the national federation – clashed due to the latter’s refusal to endorse the International Transfer Certificates of the foreign players eyeing to play in the PVL Reinforced Conference.

Without PNVF’s nod, international players couldn’t get the needed approval from the FIVB, the sport’s world governing body, and would not be able to play in the import-laced conference.

‘The PVL regrets to inform the public that the foreign guest players will not be permitted to participate in the ongoing season-ending conference until their ITCs are duly approved,’ said PVL organizer Sports Vision in a statement yesterday.

The PVL lambasted the PNVF and called the latter’s behavior as ‘unprofessional’ and ‘obstructionist.’

The league claimed it was never remiss in the timely submission of all documentation – including signed clearances and final endorsements – but the PNVF, for curious reasons, just decided to withhold its final nod.

This delay not only disrupts the tournament’s competitive integrity but also jeopardizes the careers and contracts of professional players who traveled to the Philippines in good faith.

The PVL stressed that it remains committed to following international volleyball protocols and upholding the integrity of the sport.

Nicole Whisenhunt’s homage to heritage and timeless artistry

Nicole Whisenhunt once again reaffirmed her reputation as one of Manila’s most refined jewellers with the unveiling of her latest Heritage Collection – a stunning curation that bridges the golden elegance of the 1950s with the sleek sophistication of contemporary design. Held in an intimate, stylish setting at the Leon Gallery International, the event celebrated the enduring artistry of fine jewelry, showcasing vintage and antique treasures from iconic maisons such as Bulgari, Tiffany and Co., Marina B, Hemmerle and Georges L’Enfant alongside Whisenhunt’s own creations.

Each piece in the collection told a story of heritage, craftsmanship, and the artistry that transforms adornment into history. The jewels shimmered not only with beauty but also with the rich cultural and design legacies they represent, reminding guests that jewelry, at its finest, is wearable art.

The evening opened with a VIP dinner that perfectly complemented the collection’s allure. Guests savored Nomad Caviar, paired with Perrier-Jouët champagne and select wines from Project Vino, creating an experience of pure indulgence. Adding a touch of Parisian luxury, Guerlain loot bags echoed the event’s theme of timeless sophistication.

Nicole enthused, ‘Jewelry stands parallel to art – especially pieces with history, which go beyond beauty. Jewelry carries not only elegance but also cultural and design value. These are preserved art forms in their own right. I am very proud to have them presented in a setting that recognizes their significance. Each reflecting the timeless artistry that continues to inspire us today.’

Nicole’s Heritage Collection is more than a showcase of exquisite jewels – it is a celebration of eras, emotions, and elegance reborn – reminding us that true style transcends time, living on through craftsmanship, memory, and the enduring sparkle of beauty itself.

Stocks rebound as market cheers September inflation

The local stock market bounced back as investors welcomed the country’s September inflation which fell within the forecast range of the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP).

The bellwether Philippine Stock Exchange index capped off yesterday’s session with a 1.39-percent or 83.51-point jump to 6,083.83.

The broader All Shares index likewise improved by 0.8 percent or 29.27 points to settle at 3,673.22.

‘The local market bounced back following its drop near the 6,000 support as investors hunted for bargains,’ Philstocks Financial research manager Japhet Tantiangco said.

Tantiangco said the market took positively the country’s latest inflation print in September, which remained benign.

Inflation quickened to 1.7 percent in September from 1.5 percent in August, but fell within the BSP’s 1.5 to 2.3 percent forecast for the month. It averaged 1.7 percent from January to September, below the government target of two to four percent for this year.

‘The favorable inflation figure supports the country’s consumer outlook and raises the possibility of further easing by the BSP,’ Tantiangco said.

All counters finished in the green, with financials leading the charge with a 2.23-percent surge.

Total value turnover declined slightly to P10.34 billion from the previous day’s P12.12 billion.

Market breadth was positive as advancers edged out decliners, 97 to 92, while 60 issues did not change hands.

ICTSI remained as the session’s top traded stock, this time climbing by 0.89 percent to P512.50 per share.

It was followed by Ayala Corp. which grew by 1.42 percent to P484.40 and URC which soared by 5.23 percent to P74.50.

Values: The lasting antidote to corruption

Forty-five years ago, corruption in government was one of the major issues which led to EDSA People Power and the change in government. A few months before the event, at the lowest ebb of our country, I wrote a widely appreciated article in the leading newspaper titled, ‘Values – Cornerstones of a Society’s Destiny.’ My contention then was that changing some people in government, changing a whole government or even changing the system of government will not solve our problems as long as we do not change our values. Our country’s history since then has proven this view correct.

Today, almost half a century later, corruption has not only persisted through several administrations, but has become progressively worse, costing up to 40 percent of our annual national budget per some estimates. This easily amounts to trillions of pesos.

To solve the problem, successive leaders have created (in addition to the Constitution-mandated Office of the Ombudsman) special commissions, i.e., Presidential Commission Against Graft and Corruption (Magsaysay); Presidential Anti-Graft Commission (Macapagal-Arroyo); Presidential Anti-Corruption Commission (Duterte). All these special bodies ‘eventually disappeared into irrelevance,’ as a columnist put it.

Today, to keep the Filipino people’s ire from boiling over in the face of unmitigated corruption in the use of government funds for its flood control projects, President Marcos Jr. again created another special body, the Independent Commission for Infrastructure, to investigate and take appropriate action against all perpetrators, regardless of their position or influence. Once again, our long- suffering countrymen’s hopes and expectations for the full accountability of all guilty parties have been revived.

But judging from past experience, many still ask if this latest move will really provide the lasting solution our country needs. Will identifying, prosecuting, convicting and imprisoning some guilty parties in government and their accomplices in the private sector prevent future epidemics of corruption? Or are these steps just superficial band-aid remedies, as our long history has shown?

I strongly believe that the solution lies not in short-term fixes, but in a long-term reset of our values system (including values we preach but whose opposites we practice). The solution I propose is a generational task, but its fruits are also generational. It is realistic, not just a pie-in-the sky aspiration. I’m referring to institutionalizing in our schools a values education program, starting in the primary grades and covering all levels in our K-12 curriculum.

Why do I know this works? Because it is at the heart of the basic education system of the only ASEAN country which is exemplary in many aspects of national life – economic, political, civic and social. I refer to Singapore, the first and at present the only first world country in the ASEAN community. Singapore has zero tolerance for corruption in public service, and its anti-corruption culture is reinforced by proven, effective measures to root out and severely penalize offenders.

Let’s look at what Singapore has done to get to where it is today. An integral pillar of Singapore’s pursuit of its national vision is its basic education system, which places strong emphasis on character development and values education. This is institutionalized in what it calls Character and Citizenship Education (CCE), a cross-disciplinary program that permeates the educational curriculum, starting in the primary grades (the child’s earliest academic experience). As the name implies, CCE’s goal is to produce citizens with good moral values, civic awareness and social skills with which they can positively and productively engage their total environment.

Using Singapore’s decades-long (since 1959) CCE model as a guide and without reinventing the wheel, my simple proposal is to make character development and values education an integral part of our own basic education system (K-12). This calls for recalibrating our present system beyond the intermittent teaching of Civics and GMRC (good manners and right conduct), which might not even be part of the present curriculum. A paradigm shift in the training and attitude of teachers is also called for, because in Singapore, ‘every teacher is a CCE teacher.’

In my view, deeply instilling the right values in our youth at the earliest possible age is the most effective and lasting solution, not only to endemic corruption, but to other social ills that plague our country today. Ultimately, it is also the key to changing our fortunes as a people.

To end this piece, think about this: Mayor Vico Sotto of Pasig has become the rare ‘poster boy’ for integrity and good governance by a young leader in government. Imagine if we had a hundred, a thousand or even a hundred thousand Vico Sottos in public service. This is what a deliberate, encompassing values education can help accomplish, as Singapore has been proving to the world for a long time.

Blackpink’s Jisoo, Zayn Malik collaborate on ‘Eyes Closed’

Fandoms will collide following the announcement of a surprise collaboration between Jisoo of the Korean girl group Blackpink and former One Direction member Zayn Malik.

Jisoo had been teasing a duet with an unnamed male artist for the new digital track “Eyes Closed,” eventually revealing the collaborator was Zayn.

“A duet is near,” one post teased, while another said, “Two voices, one orbit. Coming soon.”

The artist even shared a snippet of the song after confirming Zayn as her duet partner.

“We should fall in love with our eyes closed, better if we keep it where we don’t know,” goes part of the chorus sung by both artists. “The nights we’ve been in, the names and the faces of who we were with.”

“Eyes Closed” is Jisoo’s latest piece of music after her “Amortage” extended play earlier this year that featuring the tracks “Earthquake,” “Your Love,” “Tears,” and “Hugs and Kisses.”

The Korean singer is currently on a world tour with Blackpink, which will make a stop in the Philippines this November, just several months after Jisoo staged her first solo fan meet in the country.

Zayn had previously attended one of Blackpink’s concerts in New York last July with Khai, his daughter with ex-partner Gigi Hadid.

The British artist recently announced that he will be having a residency in Las Vegas beginning January next year and will be reuniting with fellow One Direction alum Louis Tomlinson for a Netflix docu-travel series.

Jericho Rosales, Mon Confiado decline chance at politics

Mon Confiado and Jericho Rosales play Emilio Aguinaldo and Manuel Quezon, the Philippines’ first and second presidents, in TBA Studios’ upcoming movie “Quezon.”

However, given the chance, the two actors would not attempt to throw their names into the political arena.

At a press conference for “Quezon” last October 7 at the historic Manila Hotel, both Rosales and Confiado were asked if they would consider entering politics.

Both answered in the negative, with Confiado first saying he never had interest in politics nor did it ever cross his mind to become a politician, and to strike his point home he admitted being unable to handle the responsibility without knowledge on governance.

To explain his answer, Rosales shared about his recent trip to Tanzania and South Africa with his girlfriend Janine Gutierrez, and singled out a walking tour in Cape Town about the late Nelson Mandela.

The anti-apartheid activist Mandela previously served as president of South Africa and was a recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize.

“We just need leaders who really care, genuinely and sincerely care,” Rosales quoted what a guide said at the end of the tour.

Rosales said that everything can be learned – pointing out he bounced around schools, learned English from watching television and never finished college – including acting and the arts, but what separates individuals is a commitment to lead.

“‘Pag wala sa puso mo at hindi talaga genuine sa’yo ang pag-care at pagsilbi sa isang tao, hindi mangyayari ‘yun, ano pa ang isang bansa?” Rosales posited.

The actor stressed his craft is his biggest love, and rhetorically asked how could he set that aside for a position of power.

“Paano ko sasabayan ang isang bokasyon at ang pamumuno ng isang bansa,” Rosales ended. “Hindi biro maging presidente, so ang hinihiling namin ay ang puso mismo ng isang presidente.”

Starring with Rosales and Confiado in “Quezon” are Karylle, Romnick Sarmenta, JC Santos, Angeli Bayani, Bodjie Pascua, Joross Gamboa, Ketchup Eusebio, Jake Macapagal, Therese Malvar and “Game of Thrones” star Iain Glen as Leonard Wood.

Benjamin Alves will reprise his role as a younger Quezon while Arron Villaflor and Cris Villanueva will once again play the fictional character Joven Hernando at different ages.

“Quezon” directed and co-written by Jerrold Tarog will hit Philippine theaters nationwide beginning October 15.

Eala takes shot at Top 50 WR in Osaka

Alex Eala, with a new career-high world ranking at No. 54, is enjoying a little break in Wuhan, China before resuming her campaign over in Japan next week, shooting for a second professional title and a spot inside the Top 50 WR.

Eala got an early boot from the WTA1000 Wuhan Open last week, absorbing a 4-6, 6-3, 2-6 defeat against Japanese Moyuka of Japan in Round 1 of the qualifiers.

But thanks to a string of earlier wins, Eala improved four rungs up from No. 58 with 1,131 points.

And she’s determined to shore up her drive as one of the seeded main draw players in the WTA250 Japan Open in Osaka on Monday alongside Leylah Fernandez and Naomi Osaka.

The grind continues for Eala from there, strutting her stuff in the Guangzhou Open on Oct. 20 to 26 and the Hong Kong Open on Oct. 27 to Nov. 2.

It’s been a loaded Asian swing for Eala so far with three stops in China.

PVL orders replay of games as imports get green light

Back to square one.

It came to be after the Premier Volleyball League ordered a replay of the Reinforce Conference matches that pitted ZUS Coffee with Akari and Choco Mucho with Capital1 Tuesday at the Ynares Center Montalban.

The decision was made after the pro league finally received Wednesday the International Transfer Certificates (ITCs) of all its imports and Filipino-foreign players, who all can now play for their respective squads starting Thursday.

Matches will resume Thursday with Galeries Tower battling Petro Gazz at 4 p.m. and Farm Fresh tackling Nxled at 6:30 p.m. at the City of Dasmariñas.

Without the ITCs the day before, the PVL was forced to push through with its opening-day schedule minus the international players.

It ended with ZUS and Choco Mucho ending up as winners.

But all of that will be stricken off the books following the recent developments.

‘The PVL wishes to inform the fans that the two matches held on October 7 will be replayed at a date to be announced,’ said the league in a statement.

The league clarified that all four teams that suited up in the opener had already agreed before the game on this pre-condition.

‘The upcoming replays will allow all teams to compete with their complete rosters, including their respective imports, ensuring the full excitement and high-level competition our fans expect,’ it said.

The impasse happened after the Philippine National Volleyball Federation deferred giving its nod on the ITCs, an important requirement for international players to see action.

Thankfully, it had been resolved that somehow restored the peace in Philippine volleyball.

DA seeks to nearly double insurance subsidy for farmers

The Department of Agriculture (DA) is asking Congress to raise the government’s crop insurance subsidy to P8 billion to provide coverage for up to 4.2 million agricultural workers, aiming to shield them from climate risks and rising production costs.

In a statement yesterday, the DA said only 2.3 million farmers are currently insured under the Philippine Crop Insurance Corp. (PCIC), which represents just over half of the country’s agricultural workforce.

Further, the government agency said the PCIC provides a maximum coverage of P20,000 per hectare for rice farmers, only a third of the estimated average production cost of P60,000 per hectare.

‘PCIC’s current subsidy level is simply inadequate,’ said Agriculture Secretary Francisco Tiu Laurel Jr.

‘We need to insure more farmers at realistic levels that reflect the true cost of production, especially as climate change and market volatility continue to impact the sector.’

Under the proposed 2026 General Appropriations Act, the PCIC’s subsidy remains at P4.5 billion, the same level since 2022.

Tiu Laurel described the funding amount as ‘stagnant,’ undermining the government’s ability to protect farmers from mounting risks.

‘To insure 4.2 million farmers, we need about P8 billion. That means we’re short by P3.5 billion,’ he said.

‘Of the 4.2 million farmers we aim to cover, 2.2 million will be rice farmers, an increase of nearly a million from the current number.’

Expanding insurance coverage is a strategic investment in the country’s food security, the agriculture chief said.

By boosting PCIC’s capacity, the government can provide a stronger safety net for smallholder farmers, especially rice producers, who face the dual burden of rising input costs and increasingly unpredictable weather patterns.

‘Crop insurance isn’t just a financial product. It’s a critical lifeline,’ Tiu Laurel said.

‘When typhoons, droughts or pest outbreaks hit, insured farmers can recover faster and get back to planting. Without it, many are left in debt or forced to abandon farming altogether.’

He called on lawmakers to prioritize agricultural resilience in the national budget, highlighting that a well-funded insurance system is essential to stabilize rural incomes, encourage continued production and secure the country’s food supply.