Baguio media notes and anecdotes
>> Monday, March 24, 2014
BENCHWARMER
The first Baguio media pigeonhole was on the wall of Jimmy Tong’s Session
Café, that favorite watering hole near midway corner of the city’s inclined
main street with Calderon St. The café, a landmark of Baguio’s formative years,
is no longer there, It has been taken over by Jollibee. The present crop of
local journalists now repairs to Roland Wong’s (a.ka. Chongloi) Luisa’s Café
where a smaller vertical drop box hangs on the wall beside the staircase.
The original pigeonhole at Session Café
could accommodate all kinds of press, praise, and “please” releases from all
over, including from politicians. Anyone in media could have a niche, as you
then could count the practitioners. Without having to organize another press
corps, anybody interested got to serve as president of the Baguio Press Club
that later became Baguio Correspondents and Broadcasters Club with the entry of
radio.
These days, over a hundred claim
legitimacy to the practice of community journalism here. They sport all sorts
of identification cards and can decide to create a new media club in one
meeting and, as a press corps, ready to execute a parade and review at the
Burnham Park grounds. Aside from the BCBC, they have organized the Cordillera
PNP Press Corps, Tourism Press Corps, Baguio PNP Press Corps, Cordillera
Videographers and
Photographers Press Corps, Camp John Hay
Press Corps, Benguet Press Corps and, a few days back, the Cordillera
Broadcasters Alliance.
Some of the few surviving veterans claim
competition was keener then. Occasionally, enterprise would be inspired by a
press release in the pigeonhole. An early bird at the café trying to fix a
hang-over with coffee laced with brandy might scoop out all the copies, rewire
the story from somewhere, feed it to the desk and then go see a movie. Later in
the later afternoon, he would reappear at Session Café. Assured it was well
past the deadline, he would share the story with the rest of the guys.
Powered by alcohol, evening
conversations would turn spirited, ricocheting from one topic to another.
During one of those regular sprees, somebody swore that girl, rubbed on balding
pates, was a sure-fire cure for receding hairlines. Another turned attention to
a tiny, winged lizard that had the uncanny ability to hop or fly from one pine
tree to another.
No one took noted or listened, except
the gentle Kalinga, Gus Saboy of the Philippines News Service. Baguio
journalists often talk at the same time, especially when alcohol has already
sharpened the brain and loosened the tongue – or the other way
around. So Gus scooped them all with his boxed, front-page features on
what he heard about Baguio’s flying dragons and the potency of garlic as a
remedy for hirsute problems.
Enterprise was the name of the game
then. Radio reporters broke developing news by the hour and those in print
followed these up for the national dailies and the few Sunday weeklies.
Today, it appears the reverse. What you
read in the papers, you hear it read verbatim by an FM radio anchorman the
following morning, sometimes without acknowledging the source. The
late George Jularbal, undoubtedly one of the best in both mediums, also noted
younger broadcasters no longer report the news; they shout it.
The venerable Sinai Hamada, founder of
the Baguio Midland Courier, spelled out the ethical guideposts for responsible
community journalism: fair, fearless, friendly and free. Lakay Sinai, who also
edited The Collegian student paper of the University of the Philippines, lived
up to these standards he set. He wrote fearlessly with form and substance about
issues then in the Cordillera, some of which remain issues of today. One of his
first editorials was on the sad state of the Mountain Trail that took
generations to be upgraded and deserve its nomenclature as Halsema National
Highway.
Dependent on letterpress technology, newspapering
then was a slow, tedious and stressful process. Stories had to be typed on the
creaking Underwood, composed with hand-picked letter fonts or lead-cast on the
giant linotype machine. bedded and then ran.
One time, I was told, Sinai dozed off
while writing his editorial. No one in the staff dared to wake him up. The
printer, fearful then Benguet Gov. Ben Palispis would be bristling if he won’t
have his copy at breakfast, roused him up. The editor, who was known for
his wry humor, looked at what he wrote, punched a single key, and pulled out
the manuscript. Except for that period he just added, the piece was complete
just before he fell asleep.
Sinai’s professionalism inspired
G. Bert Floresca, Ben Rillera, Juan Valdez, Virgilio Bautista, Gabriel Pawid
Keith Sr., and others who joined him in the Courier. Sinai eventually
yielded editorship to his son Steve and to a younger staff the
likes of Oswald Alvaro, my brother Joe and, later, Abe Belena.
Steve, who gave up a promising career in
advertising, came home thinking he was ready to take over. He, however,
repeatedly saw his old man crumpling and sending his initial reports to the
wastebasket. So he learned fast, developing his own style yet keeping the
personality of the Courier as established by his father.
Oswald never took notes and wrote
by hand and from memory. His news-breakers seemed innocuous and harmless, but
his follow-up stories would turn more controversial as they came, slowly
developing into full-blown exposes. With ease, Abe, the only
honest-top-goodness journalism graduate , turned seemingly trivial information
into feature gems that matched the quality of the outputs of Peppot Ilagan,
Domcie Cimatu, Jimmy Laking, Joel Dizon, Vincent Cabreza and Chris
Bartolo, all of the Gold Ore.
Brother Joedax disdained flourish and
embellishment, always maintaining sentence brevity and objectivity. He started
out at The Mountaineer, under editors Lucio Dixon and Gerry Evangelista Sr.,
and later joined Oswald, PeppotIlagan and Willy Cacdac in the Focus, a weekly
magazine hatched by Des Bautista and editor by G. Bert. Like other
second-generation practitioners, he doubled in radio news reportage, with
Willy and George on dzHB, now dwHB.
Editor G. Bert one time apparently
didn’t read Joedax’s story but, for one reason or another, directed Peppot to
re-write it. Peppot typed it out as is, faithful to the original,
and submitted. “Kastoy a tiagsurat, Joe,” G. bert boomed, slapping the
recopy sheet with the back of his hand.
Steve was my editor at the Courier form
1980 until 1985, when he resigned and set up the Baguio-Cordillera Post.
Courier founder Sinai also resigned and followed his literal son. I followed
him as we were so close. We argued a lot over a lot of things,, none of
which we could recall, until he passed in April, 2004.
What I remember was that time work
stress and gin lulled us both to sleep n our desks, before we could
proofread his editorial. We woke up to a nightmare at dawn. His piece, set up
in linotype, was garbled beyond comprehension, but which the printer ran after
failing several times to shake us back to life.
Resetting the lead slugs to proper order
and re-running 8,000 copies back-to-back would earn the ire of LakayOseo, the
printing press manager and that of then Benguet Gov. Ben Palispis over
having his copy late.
I couldn’t look at Steve, and turned
more sheepish when the printer, his uncle, tried to reassure him like a Job’s
comforter: Saan ka adinga aburido unay, Steve. Ammom met
nga awan agbasbasa ti editoryal.”
Proofreading improved when Steve took in
Freddie Concu and younger reporters Nathan Alcantara and Leslie Hernandez.
Freddie was also then working with th e Baguio Water District but concentrated
on issues affecting the Benguet Electric Cooperative. Nathan was assigned to
the Baguio beat while Leslie covered Benguet.
When a town mayoralty bet shoved a
fifty-peso bill into Leslie’s pocket during an interview, the cub reporter
immediately handed it back. The political wannabe returned and Leslie gave it
back with dispatch. Leslie eventually gave up on the exchange. But he couldn’t
sleep, and came to me for advice.
We repaired to a canteen where I ordered
snacks and then listened to his tale of woe over the bribe. Our merienda
consumed, I advised him to take the tab, which equaled the problematic P50
bill. “You should feel better now as I had just imbibed half of your burden,” I
reminded him. “Don’t interview him anymore.”
Steve and I grappled with shadows that
had nothing to do with cash. He would rib me whenever somebody would ask how I
was related to Joe. I would answer it’s the other way around, that Joedax is a
brother of Mondax. It was easier for me to be in the shadow of my brother than
for Steve to be known as a son of the respected lawyer and editor. As Frank
Cimatu, Palanca aware winner many times over and new BCBC president by
acclamation noted then, Steve tried to climb Mount Sinai.
Domcie, who happens to be Frank’s elder
brother, joined the Courier after Steve and I left to put up the Post. Unlike
us, he didn’t stay long but still got separation compensation. Eliral Refuerzo,
now publisher of The Baguio Reporter, and Alfred Dizon, now at the
helm of the Northern Philippine Times, had their own stint the Courier ,
together with now syndicated pro bono columnist March Fianza.
With more time to quaff his beer
now even as I can no longer, Domcie still goes to Luisa’s where the younger
ones check on what’s on their pigeonhole and act like they own the place.
(e-mail: mondaxbench@yahoo.com for comments.)
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