Member, Asian American Journalists Association (AAJA)
and Investigative Reporters and Editors (IRE)
To complement my earlier exposé today about the Filipino impostor in Los Angeles, California, here's a newsvideo of the person. Please click the link and enjoy the background music:
PHILIPPINE VILLAGE VOICE - Redefining Community News Currents & Breaking News
/ News That Fears None, Views That Favor Nobody /
. . . A community service of Philippine Village Voice (PhilVoiceNews@gmail.com) for the information and understanding of Filipinos and the diverse communities in North America . . .
Nobody Insults the Writers of MabuhayRadio.com and Gets Away with It
1
Saturday, 11 December 2010 17:48
Dear Friends, Fellow Writers and Professional Journalists:
From Toronto, Ontario, Canada, comes the Entertainment Video of the Week, if not the Month of December 2010. It garners definitely a “Two-thumbs up” rating.
View the Filipino Impostor in Los Angeles, CA, at this URL: http://www.mabuhayradio.com/entertainment/youtube-newsvideo-of-pex-aves-the-filipino-impostor-of-a-lawyer-and-journalist-in-los-angeles
Aside from the YouTube where Romy Marquez posted it, it now appears also in Facebook.com at this URL:
Nobody, especially a fake journalist, gets to insult the writers of our website and gets away with it. We are now equipped to get back at our detractors using the Internet, websites, the YouTube and Facebook -- without the use of gutter language but employing wit and humor and the truth.
Bobby Reyes Doesn't Have to Prove He Graduated from a School of Journalism
2
Tuesday, 14 December 2010 17:30
In a message dated 12/8/2010 8:22:02 P.M. Pacific Standard Time, monramirez writes in the
This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it
:
Bobby,
What for are these documents? You do not have to prove that you graduated. If they want to know, they can check with the schools.
Also, people like Nick Joaquin had not college diplomas. In fact, he did not even graduate from high school although UST produced a high school diploma for him because it was needed by a foreign university so they could give him an honorary degree.
And of course Andres Bonifacio did not have a diploma.
Thanks, Mon Ramirez, for Sound Advice (And Here's My Latest Satire)
3
Tuesday, 14 December 2010 17:31
Thank you, Mon, for your viewpoints and sound advice. Sorry for the late reply, as I nearly lost your posting in my mail box.
You are absolutely right. Even the great William Shakespeare did not finish grammar school. But of course, English was his indigenous tongue.
IMHO, writing skill is inborn and schooling just improves it. But when one writes in the United States, the foreign-born (immigrant) writer is supposed to know the basic rules of the English grammar, etc., etc. Those who try to write in English must do it right, otherwise they become butts of jokes.
Perhaps you and the rest of the recipients will like my latest satire,
Filipino Americans Must Do “Itik Cleansing”,
BTW I was always proud to have been tutored by then-Poet-pundit Fred Burce Bunao. He served as my literary mentor for many years. In spite of my having majored in journalism in San Beda College, I have said so many times that I learned probably more from Mr. Bunao than from my journalism professors. But very few Filipino writers in the United States like to pick up even pointers on how to improve their writing ability. They think that they know everything there is to be learned. People don't get it that education in any field is a lifetime commitment and a nursery-to-retirement process of learning.
From Toronto, Ontario, Canada, comes the Entertainment Video of the Week, if not the Month of December 2010. It garners definitely a “Two-thumbs up” rating.
View the Filipino Impostor in Los Angeles, CA, at this URL: http://www.mabuhayradio.com/entertainment/youtube-newsvideo-of-pex-aves-the-filipino-impostor-of-a-lawyer-and-journalist-in-los-angeles
Aside from the YouTube where Romy Marquez posted it, it now appears also in Facebook.com at this URL:
http://www.facebook.com/pages/manage/#!/pages/mabuhayradiocom/143812262338104?v=wall
Nobody, especially a fake journalist, gets to insult the writers of our website and gets away with it. We are now equipped to get back at our detractors using the Internet, websites, the YouTube and Facebook -- without the use of gutter language but employing wit and humor and the truth.
Enjoy,
Mabuhay,
Lolo Bobby M. Reyes
Editor
www.mabuhayradio.com
Bobby,
What for are these documents? You do not have to prove that you graduated. If they want to know, they can check with the schools.
Also, people like Nick Joaquin had not college diplomas. In fact, he did not even graduate from high school although UST produced a high school diploma for him because it was needed by a foreign university so they could give him an honorary degree.
And of course Andres Bonifacio did not have a diploma.
Mon Ramirez
You are absolutely right. Even the great William Shakespeare did not finish grammar school. But of course, English was his indigenous tongue.
IMHO, writing skill is inborn and schooling just improves it. But when one writes in the United States, the foreign-born (immigrant) writer is supposed to know the basic rules of the English grammar, etc., etc. Those who try to write in English must do it right, otherwise they become butts of jokes.
Perhaps you and the rest of the recipients will like my latest satire,
Filipino Americans Must Do “Itik Cleansing”,
URL: http://www.mabuhayradio.com/humor-satire/filipino-americans-must-do-itik-cleansing
BTW I was always proud to have been tutored by then-Poet-pundit Fred Burce Bunao. He served as my literary mentor for many years. In spite of my having majored in journalism in San Beda College, I have said so many times that I learned probably more from Mr. Bunao than from my journalism professors. But very few Filipino writers in the United States like to pick up even pointers on how to improve their writing ability. They think that they know everything there is to be learned. People don't get it that education in any field is a lifetime commitment and a nursery-to-retirement process of learning.
Mabuhay,
Lolo Bobby M. Reyes
Editor
www.mabuhayradio.com