Some Trivia on the Philippines

While searching for some information about the Philippines, I found these trivia from the net.
For those who don’t know the difference between Fillipines and Philippines; Philippinians and Filipinos. LOL

The Philippines


The Philippines was named after the Crown Prince Philip II of Spain. He was reputed to be an extreme introvert, austere, humorless, and unpopular. Dubbed the “Spider of the Escorial” because he seldom left his palace, Philip II reigned over the vast Spanish empire handed down by his father, Charles V, and was a leading patron of Catholicism. He was elegant and slender and, in his youth, good-looking. Philip’s reign, however, marked the decline of Spanish power, leading one historian to describe him as essentially mediocre and paralyzed by indecision. (From Bong Barrameda’s Pinoy Trivia Vol. 2, Anvil Publishing, 1993).

The Filipino

The term Filipino originally referred to Spaniards and Spanish mestizos born in the Philippines. Espanoles-Filipinos was the term that these people called themselves. Later, the native indios and Chinese mestizos also called themselves Filipinos in the belief that education and wealth gave them the cloak of Spanish culture. (From Bong Barrameda’s Pinoy Trivia Vol. 1, Anvil Publishing, 1993).

Pinoy

It is believed that the term Pinoy to mean Filipino originated from the early Filipinos who came to the United States. The Manongs (uncles) as the “oldtimers” were also known called themselves Pinoys to distinguish themselves from Filipinos living in the Philippines. (Contributed partly by Dawn Bohulano Mabalon whose family has been using the terms Pinoy/Pinay since the 1920’s.)

Flip ( I like this one . This is for VD who calls us Flips.)

No one is certain where Flip came from to mean Filipino. Continuing discussions in soc.culture..filipino, soc.culture.asian.american and in the Pinoy-L mailing list make it certain that flip was originally a derogatory word for a Filipino similar to gook, kike and chink. Some pundits say flip came from either ‘fucking little island people’ or ‘funny little island people’ or ‘flippin’ little island people’ or ‘funky little island people’. In early to middle 1980’s young Pilipino-Americans (as opposed to Filipino-Americans) began to use the term for themselves to make known their identity as Pilipino-Americans (the use of Pilipino instead of Filipino seems to be also another identity issue). Flip thus became an empowering word of identity. However, many are against owning the word because of its derogatory origins.

Cool :slight_smile:

With my thread on Korea, we could make this “International Country Week” on Saddo’s…

Make a thread and make comments or critisizms, observations on a country you know about…

I want to have a trip to the philippines some day.. it’s a popular destination for Melbournites.

You’ll like our beaches and women here. I just don’t know if they will like you. LOL;D

If you want to be in the headlines, go to Sulu, Mindanao. ;D

I really enjoyed my time in the Philippines and would recommend it to anyone. I didn’t like Manila so much as it was just too crowded and noisy for me, but I get like that with any big city. I don’t like London or Seoul either. Boracay was really nice, lovely beaches and a lot of nice places to eat. I even rode a horse. :smiley:

Whooo. Brother Miles. It’s nice to know that you have already visited my country.

I also don’t like Manila. Polluted and so noisy.

I guess I’ll have to drop my gay jokes on you.

You tried to ride a horse and that’s enough proof that you’re not gay. ;D Try also to ride a carabao (Philippine Buffalo). You’ll also like it.:cool:

Whooo. Brother Miles. It’s nice to know that you have already visited my country.

I also don’t like Manila. Polluted and so noisy.

I guess I’ll have to drop my gay jokes on you.

You tried to ride a horse and that’s enough proof that you’re not gay. ;D Try also to ride a carabao (Philippine Buffalo). You’ll also like it.:cool:[/quote]

My helmet fell off as well! Some scary shit! :o;D

The Buffalo sounds pretty cool, I’ve never heard of riding them before.

The Phillipines is the number one location for callers in to the show American Idol. Thus proving it has an extremely high gay/not gay ratio.

Don’t ask me how I know this, I just do.

American Idol is popular in my country. :cool:

American Idol is popular in my country. :cool:[/quote]

Do you watch it, Bruce? ;D

33% of you lot are all underweight

dunno what it is now but was a fact a year or so back.

aint the main source of income out there rice picking?

American Idol is popular in my country. :cool:[/quote]

I’m thinking that American Idol is probably very popular with PAC fans. :slight_smile:

I’m overweight by 24 lbs right now. I’m back to my regular exercise after 6 months of doing nothing.

With regular exercise, from 180 lbs I’m now 164lbs. Hope to get back to 140 after 6 months.

I’ll try to do some rice picking. Hope it will decrease my weight.;D;D;D

Btw, Philippines is the best place on earth if you’re an ordinary employee.:cool:

Simple living is nice. After I retire from work, I’ll stay in my grandfather’s island and enjoy my remaining days there. Nice white beach near the pacific ocean, fresh sea foods, cool breeze in my nipa hut, no computer or calls to bother me and maybe 1 or 2 housemaids to do all the house chores. That’s what you call life and you can only enjoy that in my country.:cool::cool::cool:

Friend of mine is vacationing in Boracay right now. Talk about beautiful beaches :o

Yes, it’s really nice out there.

The Philippines might not be the wealthiest place in the world, but it sure has some of the most splendid scenery and nature. The gray, miserable UK or the beaches of the Philippines? I know which one I would choose! ;D

I’m overweight by 24 lbs right now. I’m back to my regular exercise after 6 months of doing nothing.

With regular exercise, from 180 lbs I’m now 164lbs. Hope to get back to 140 after 6 months.

I’ll try to do some rice picking. Hope it will decrease my weight.;D;D;D

Btw, Philippines is the best place on earth if you’re an ordinary employee.:cool:

Simple living is nice. After I retire from work, I’ll stay in my grandfather’s island and enjoy my remaining days there. Nice white beach near the pacific ocean, fresh sea foods, cool breeze in my nipa hut, no computer or calls to bother me and maybe 1 or 2 housemaids to do all the house chores. That’s what you call life and you can only enjoy that in my country.:cool::cool::cool:[/quote]

i bet the country is nice in parts, but i used to know a lot of Pinoy’s (nice guys, real good laugh) but fuck they had it hard out there, everything was simple and basic for them, couldn’t do that my self.

I’ve never been to the Philippines, but I used to live on Guam and Saipan and they were absolutely beautiful.

Boracay is beautiful but it’s already dirty. Compared to the island I’m talking, Boracay is not beautiful for me.:cool:

Miles, you try the beaches of Davao, Mindanao. I like it better than Boracay. The place is blessed with many tropical fruits. :cool:

[b]Here’s some boxing trivia. These are all Filipino boxers who have become boxing champions:

Pancho Villa[/b]
Pancho Villa, who has been touted as the greatest flyweight of the century by the Associated Press, was also the first world champion from Asia. He was one of only four Asians enshrined into the New York-based International Boxing Hall of Fame in 1994. He was also inducted to the World Boxing Hall of Fame.

Born as Francisco Guilledo in Ilog, Negros Occidental on August 1, 1901, he began his boxing career in 1919 and adopted the name Pancho Villa after a famous Mexican revolutionary leader.

After his successful bids in the Philippines, he went to New York in pursuit of international bouts. Known for his whirlwind style, Villa, then 22, knocked out reigning world flyweight champion Jimmy Wilde of England in the seventh round at New York’s Polo Grounds on June 18, 1923.

Among the opponents that he trounced were Benny Schwartz, Georgie Marks, Frankie Ash and Clever Sencio.

During his entire boxing career, Villa engaged in 99 bouts - 22 knockouts, 49 wins by decision, 5 losses, 4 draws and 19 no-decision bouts.

Gabriel “Flash” Elorde
In 1974, the World Boxing Council named Gabriel “Flash Elorde” as “the greatest world junior lightweight boxing champion in WBC history” for winning 79 bouts in his professional boxing career. In 1993, he became the first Asian inducted into the New York-based International Boxing Hall of Fame. He was also enshrined into the World Boxing Hall of Fame.

Elorde became a world champion in the 130-pound division on March 16, 1960 when he knocked out American Harold Gomes at the Araneta Coliseum in Cubao, Quezon City. Since then, he has defended his title in 10 bouts for seven years, making him the longest reigning world junior lightweight champion ever. He finally lost to Japanese Yoshiaki Numata in a 15-round match in Tokyo on June 15, 1967.

Elorde was born in Bogo, Cebu in 1935 and died in 1985.

Roel Velasco
A gold medal at the first Muhammad Ali Cup Invitational Boxing Championship, a silver at the 1997 World Boxing Championships, a bronze at the 1992 Barcelona Olympics, and a bronze at the 1998 Goodwill Games. These are just a few of the many honors Roel Velasco has brought home from grueling international boxing competitions.

With such feats, Roel, the older brother of Olympic silver medallist Mansueto “Onyok” Velasco, is perhaps the country’s most successful amateur boxer. In September 1997, Roel, a light flyweight, won the country’s first gold medal in the Muhammad Ali Cup Invitational Boxing Championship. That was his third international gold medal in that year, after winning gold medals at the Italian Boxing Championship in Italy and the Balado Memorial Cup in Cuba.

In July 1998, then 24-year-old Roel also won the country’s first-ever bronze medal in the Goodwill Games held in New York, USA when he outclassed an American opponent. He later lost to a Russian boxer in the semifinals to settle for the bronze. Before this, Roel won the silver medal in the World Championships held in Budapest, Hungary in 1997.

Roel was the sole Filipino medallist (outside demonstration sports) in the 1992 Olympic Games held in Barcelona, Spain. He won the Olympic bronze medal when he was only 18 years old. Roel was born in Bago City, Negros Occidental province in 1974. He is a member of the Philippine Navy.