Saturday, May 30, 2009

Dumb and Dumber : The Perez Hilton Effect

I don't understand this whole 'controversy' involving Carrie Prejean and Perez Hilton. I watched Prejean give her infamous anti-gay marriage response on YouTube, and saw Hilton's equally annoying response to this on his website, posted a few hours later. I figured it was an unfortunate embarrassment for both of them -- and a golden moment of trash TV --then I expected it to disintegrate into the ether. 

What surprises me is how this whole affair seems to have developed the shelf life of a Twinkie -- popping up in conversations, random blogs, and otherwise neutral corners of the Internet months afterwards -- and how it snowballed from a single incident to a full-blown national scandal, fueled on by syndicated  news networks. 

Let's get this straight: I strongly support gay marriage. I have always believed that the same legal rights available to straight couples should be extended to those in same-sex relationships. I cannot honestly find a single logical, legal, or social basis for why gays should not be allowed to take the same oath if they wish. 

So I find it exceptionally tragic that the Prejean vs. Perez affair emerged at the cusp of rising protests in California. Not only does it add a touch of sleaze to an otherwise important and crucial time in the gay civil rights movement, it ironically threatens to repel even more people from an already polarizing issue. That Perez has fashioned himself as the new poster boy for gay marriage is sickening; his shrill and underhanded treatment of Prejean makes him seem even more intolerant than those against gay marriage in the first place. He has unwittingly helped draw sympathy for Prejean, who, quite honestly, was just speaking her mind. She's a beauty queen, not a politician. And beauty contests aren't exactly epicenters of social progress, so why the shock and surprise?

For the campaign against the marriage ban to gain momentum, I think it needs to court the sympathy not just of gays, but of straights and those who are still open to the issue. It needs to be treated as not just a 'gay issue,' but a human one that affects us all. 

Perez co-opting the issue and using it as a sort of self-glorifying publicity stunt is disgusting, and threatens to drag the movement back by a few decades. In so many ways he helps uphold the negative stereotype. I support gay marriage and I am one of many straights who support the movement. But bitch, you definitely don't speak for me. 



Friday, May 22, 2009

Rosamunde is now on Tumblr



I've moved! I figure this blog has been in existence for more than a year, and it's now time to seek greener pastures (literally). 

Blogspot has been good to me, but Tumblr seems to match my blogging commitment level and attention span much more, allowing me to update more often. 

I'll keep this blog alive, however, for longer and perhaps more serious posts. And for sentimental reasons, of course.

Find my new site here.

Saturday, February 7, 2009

Las Islas Filipinas

                                                   
In a Radio 4 feature on British author Nicolas Monsarrat, best known for his classic novel The Cruel Sea, Monsarrat explains his relationship with the sea and its influence on his life and work. What struck me about his description was how uncannily it seemed to resonate with the Philippines, its geography, and its current role in the world as the center of a massive labor and cultural Diaspora:

"I loved the sea from the moment I put my feet in it. I think it's the most attractive element of the Earth, and it's there to be enjoyed and respected.

"It's the testing ground.  [The sea] is what made this country a good one. I think just the fact of [the United Kingdom] being an island... [you're] voyaging outward all the time,  testing yourself against the sea, and full on making a go of it. [The British] go to the sea to make a living, to test their guts against this enemy, and out of it they bring the fish and they bring the trade from exploration. And that makes true Men."

I wonder why the ocean and our seas are so absent from Philippine historiography? Surely it has played a hand in constructing our country's biography in the same way as colonialism, war, and economic crises? We are a country of natural (watery) borders, as opposed to purely political ones. Was the sea not largely responsible for the development of very different regionalisms and dialects? Did our various bodies of water not help in producing a pre-colonial culture of mobility and trade among its many islands? Is this current Filipino Diaspora just a larger scale version of the mobility that we have always had within our islands?

A thoughtful archaeologist friend (who is also a struggling PhD student currently shuttling between Manila and Cebu) is trying to push for more geographical borders to include the seascape and not just end at the coastline. 

Oh well. As much as the sea might have shaped us, it still remains the long-suffering Nanny of Philippine cultural history, sitting just outside the frame of every official family portrait.

From Album Recuerdo de Maniiel. ca.1885

Sunday, January 18, 2009

The Count loves ****ing!

Happy new year!  Many apologies for my long (but not mysterious) absence. Thank you to my loyal/patient/long-suffering readers -- all 1.5 of you -- for not deleting me from your subscription list (yet). I am back, and am ready to continue another year of irreverent blogging.

Thought of course I have yet to scrape together a blog entry, so let me leave you with this in the meantime.

I realize that this is probably why I ended up terrible at math.

Mwa ha ha ha haaaaah...




Wednesday, November 19, 2008

Fiesta season

The American election season officially ended two weeks ago, but only in theory. Here are a few more election-inspired gems that continue to pour out from everywhere. I hope they keep coming, as this promises to be the most amusing Presidential term yet. Is this fun phenomenon in any way connected to former Saturday Night Live comedian Al Franken's run for Senate?




























And from the dark, putrid, depths of the World Wide Web (I don't even want to imagine where, exactly):

La Pequena Sarah Palin



(No) thanks to soulsis for sending me that truly disturbing video clip. More, more!

Tuesday, November 18, 2008

Live Show

This, hands down, is the best thing in the history of live online video streaming


Puppies!!!



Since my sister introduced it to me a few days ago, this site has eaten through more hours of my life than Plurk and Facebook combined. It is completely addictive.  Next: a live video stream channel for Bruno! 

Watch more live streaming at UStream.tv

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

Bush whacked

Thanks to soulsis for commiserating with me about Oliver Stone's sucky movie, and for pointing out an alternative Bush biopic. I love it:



That's My Bush! Oliver Stone, take note.