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These are not my pictures – just some images of the Newman Goldliner bus explosion along EDSA Buendia Northbound which I saw on the MMDA official Twitter account.

What is happening in this country?

Am not an incendiary expert, but it looks like there’s no fire damage inside the Newman Goldliner bus, judging from the very “clean” looking interiors. It seems to be a very tight, focused concussive force that punched out the right front windshield and the window located mid-way down the body, where Director Nicanor Bartolome of the National Capital Region Police Office (NCRPO) says the explosion occurred.

EDSA Northbound from Ayala to Buendia is reported to be closed indefinitely.

Tragic for those who have died or been injured – according to ABS-CBN News, the numbers so far are 2 dead, 15 injured.

I hope this is not part of some wider destabilization effort.

But Vice President Jejomar Binay says there’s a strong indication this may have been from some kind of bomb.

Crazy. Scary. Sad.

Interesting observation shared by the Philippine Daily Inquirer’s Dax Lucas on his personal Twitter account: Do terrorists celebrate Aquino family bdays? Today is birthday of Tita Cory. Last bus bombing on Edsa was on Kris Aquino’s birthday.

So it’s confirmed.

ABS-CBN reports that the stomach-churning death of Dr. Mary Ann Magtoto, 34, a dentist who died after falling from the 6th floor of the Shangri-La mall all the way down to the Grand Atrium, was a suicide.

In a sworn statement made to the Mandaluyong City police, a British national asserted that he saw the victim climb over the railing of the escalator before plummeting to her death.

An anonymous commenter in my previous entry, who claimed to actually be at Shangri-La when the incident occurred, said that Dr. Magtoto was screaming all the way down.

What a gruesome end.

I suppose this brings new meaning to the term “jumping to conclusions.”

Photograph (c) 2010 by @NeilParas

Tragic. Stomach-churning. Seasick.

Twitter was all abuzz yesterday afternoon with reports of a lady dentist, identified by DZMM and the Philippine Daily Inquirer as Dr. Mary Ann Magtoto, 34, who fell to her death from the 6th floor of the Shangri-La Mall all the way down to the Grand Atrium carousel level on the 2nd floor.

Photograph (c) 2010 by @NeilParas

This happened shortly before 4 in the afternoon on the 1st of July. She was pronounced dead on arrival at the Medical City.

Some people say it was a suicide; others say she was pushed, or that it was an accident. I still haven’t seen any definitive explanation on this, but the point of the matter is that someone who was part of someone else’s lives a day earlier just isn’t anymore.

Apparently, Shangri-La mall continued operations after this incident (wouldn’t want to miss out on the Twilight and Zara sale crowds, huh?), although the Atrium was closed off to the public.

Photograph (c) 2010 by Maria Almendras

I love this mall, but I swear to God my balls are always in my throat every time I take their two-story-spanning escalators hanging over a five stories of empty air. I’m surprised incidents like this don’t happen more often – although I do hear urban legends of a man who was installing some sort of Christmas decors or tarps high up over the Atrium slipping and going splat! down by Haagen-Daaz.

Rest in peace, Doc. I was never a very big fan of dentists, but I have always been a tremendous fan of human life.

Photograph (c) 2010 by @maitecaliente

A few months ago, I posted a little summary of who the top 20 overall advertising spenders were in Q4 of 2009. You can find it here.

Big headlines back then – despite being surrounded by the certified big guns of the FMCG world, i.e. Unilever, P&G, Nestle, Colgate-Palmolive, and Unilab, Manny Villar managed to artfully squeeze himself into the Top 20 with a jawdropping PhP1.3-billion pesos in advertising spend, based on rate card*.

(That’s roughly the equivalent of the total 2009 GDP of Tuvalu and Niue, by the way. I saw it on Wikipidia. Therefore it must be true.)

But that was six months ago.

The big question is – was Villar able to sustain his spending into 2010, leading up to yesterday’s national presidential elections? And how much did the front-running Noynoy Aquino spend?

I’ve got the answer.

Based on estimated rate card spending from AGB Nielsen, here’s how the Q1 advertising spend played out.

First headline: Yes, when it came to sustaining ad expenditures, Villar kept it up.

PhP1.23-billion advertising in Q1 2010.

Hard to envision that much money? It’s enough to buy roughly 1.5 kilos of rice for every single one of the 16-million Filipino households (or, if you’re a little bit more in a doting mood, roughly enough to get a one-piece ChickenJoy meal per household).

And he blew it all on advertising.

Put Q4 of last year and Q1 of this year together, and you’re easily looking at a bill of over PhP2.5-billion in a six-month span just to win a seat in Malacanang.

Makes you almost feel bad for the guy. Mainly because he lost is losing.

Second headline: Noynoy, on the other hand, had almost non-existent ad placements in Q4 last year – and it wasn’t needed, after all. With the passing of President Cory Aquino still fresh, he had an organic buzz going for him, and didn’t need to draw from his resources to play up his image even further.

But he was no small spender either. The AGB Nielsen reading above says that in the first quarter of this year, he still shelled out over half a billion pesos in advertising funds – even more than Coca-Cola, Smart, and PLDT each did!

I’m not quite sure where he got the money, but it quite possibly could have come from a garage sale involving Kris Aquino’s incredibly garish aluminum foil gold couch..

Final election results are still pending as of this writing, but it seems that Mr. Aquino has built up an insurmountable lead, despite just 1/5 the ad spend of Team Villar.

I wonder how this ties into this nice little article I found on the ABS-CBN.com website, which says, the Cojuangco/Aquino wealth depends on Noynoy’s presidency

But the most interesting number here is a very rough computation indicating the money-spent-versus-votes-achieved ratio for both men.

As of noontime today, Noynoy had scored about 12.6-million votes in the Comelec partial results. That works out to about PhP42 per vote, assuming PhP530-million spent in advertising.

Villar on the other hand is running at just 4.5-million votes. At PhP2.5-billion spend, that works out to a whopping PhP555 spent per vote.

It’s crazy. I don’t know what to say. Was that money well-spent, for both men?

What would you have done with the money, if you wanted to make a change?

* For those of you not familiar with media buying, “rate card” refers to the standardized rates published by the media networks for a standard commercial spot, although depending on negotiation skills and volume commitments, certain large advertisers may secure massive discounts off of rate card – therefore actual money paid out by each advertiser could theoretically be 50-60% lower than what is listed here.

I have never made secret the disgust I have for goons who drive SUV’s. They’re rude on the road, they’re arrogant, they’re obnoxious, and show an incredibly disproportionate sense of self-entitlement as to who gets right of way in the daily traffic gridlock that defines the Manila motoring experience.

I myself can count 3 close calls when I’ve been cut off, nearly side-swiped, or forced to the very edge of the road by these arrogant beasts who felt that me and my cute but cheap little Japanese sedan don’t deserve the same road privileges that they do.

This is all anecdotal of course; but I do not think people will disagree that it’s irritating to see a giant black SUV storming through traffic with its illegal blinkers flashing red and blue, and its horn modified to mimic the blaring trumpet typically reserved for legitimate police and fire department vehicles.

The frustrating thing is that law enforcers in this country don’t seem to act on it. Even car manufacturers seem to have embraced this perceived right to road sovereignty by running advertising campaigns highlighting how one can dominate and intimidate the road through their massive gas-guzzling behemoths – was it Nissan, or Ford, or Chrysler?

I imagine a part of this problem is that these SUV-driving despots are generally anonymous – they hide behind opaque window tint, and further reduce traceability through ill-gotten plate numbers that represent them as purported congressmen or mayors.

Which is why I was incredibly thrilled to receive a series of images that a friend had discovered on Facebook of a real-life man who not only drove an imposing SUV, but had the bravado to brandish a gun out his window to frighten a particular motorist whom he wished to out-place and out-pace.

These pictures really rock.

Wachoo looking at, fool?!

I ain’t as pretty as you, but look, I have a gun, and am therefore more important than you!

You don’t like me? Why, look, why don’t you take down my plate number?

I will confess that this is all creative license and conjecture on my part; I neither know, nor have any access to knowing the circumstances behind this incident. I do not know if he had a legitimate reason to threaten a perceived aggressor, or if he himself was simply a victim as well and was acting in self-defence.

But this set of pictures served to illustrate an important question in my mind – what is it about SUV owners, and why do they act so belligerently on the road?

[EDIT: Apparently, someone successfully tracked down and identified who owns the SUV in question - I don't see the point in posting it (although you can certainly find it online if you Google hard enough), but it just makes it clear that gun owners and rude drivers need to exhibit a greater sense of accountability in this Web 2.0 age where information can be completely crowd-sourced. And on that note... be careful when you're driving around Marikina.]

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