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Monday, March 23, 2026

Satire: Analyzing The Analogy

 


Mike Defensor, a man known for his political acrobatics and uncanny ability to land on his feet (or at least, near a microphone), has gifted us with an analogy so perfectly absurd, so dripping with unintentional irony, that it deserves a spot in the Satire Hall of Fame.

In a move that can only be described as "peak Defensor," he's likened himself and his fellow "donors" (read: generous benefactors of Rodante Marcoleta's campaign) to the unwitting accomplices of an "akyat-bahay" (house burglar).

"Why is the burglar getting off scot-free," Defensor wailed, presumably while dabbing his eyes with a handkerchief made of hundred-dollar bills, "while those who helped him break into the house are being prosecuted?"

The analogy, of course, is that Marcoleta, the recipient of a cool ₱75 million in "undeclared" campaign contributions, is the burglar, and Defensor and his pals are... well, the ladder? The crowbar? The getaway car? 

The possibilities are endless, and equally hilarious.

"It's brilliant, really," one political analyst mused, "He's essentially admitting that someone broke the law, but he's arguing that he's just a helpful handyman who happened to leave a ladder conveniently propped up against the wall."

The sheer audacity of comparing oneself to an accessory to a crime while simultaneously protesting one's innocence is truly breathtaking. 

It's like a bank robber complaining that the teller didn't smile enough while handing over the money.

But let's unpack this analogy, shall we? 

According to Defensor, Marcoleta is the "akyat-bahay" who pulled off the perfect heist by failing to declare his campaign donations. 

He's the Houdini of electoral accountability, the master of the disappearing SOCE.

And Defensor? He's just a concerned citizen who happened to have a spare ₱75 million lying around and thought, "Hey, why not donate it to a worthy cause... like Rodante Marcoleta's campaign?" 

He's just a victim of circumstance, a pawn in a larger game, a... ladder.

The irony, of course, is that Defensor's analogy inadvertently highlights the very problem he's trying to deflect: that someone, somewhere, was trying to pull a fast one on the Commission on Elections (Comelec) and the Filipino people. 

And whether he's a ladder, a crowbar, or a getaway car, Defensor was undeniably involved.

So, thank you, Mike Defensor, for providing us with a comedic masterpiece that perfectly encapsulates the absurdity of Philippine politics. 

Your "akyat-bahay" analogy is a gift that keeps on giving, a reminder that sometimes, the best satire writes itself. 

And sometimes, it's delivered by the very people it's satirizing.

"It's Showtime" Contestant Faces Public Ire for Not Being Ecstatic Enough



In the latest episode of "It's Showtime," a contestant has committed the ultimate sin: failing to adequately express gratitude for winning a measly ₱40,000. 

The internet, naturally, has erupted in righteous fury.

The incident occurred during the "Pot o Li-Pot" segment, where contestants risk it all for a chance at a life-altering jackpot. 

This particular contestant, wisely (or foolishly, according to the internet), chose the guaranteed ₱40,000 "Li-Pot" prize, a sum that could, you know, pay for groceries for a year, or maybe even a slightly used motorcycle.

However, her reaction – described by some as "underwhelmed" and "disappointing" – has sparked a national debate about the proper way to react to winning a sum of money that's less than a down payment on a condo.

"She looked like she'd just won a free t-shirt," one outraged netizen tweeted. 

"Does she even know how many instant noodles ₱40,000 can buy?"

Adding fuel to the fire was host Ion Perez, who, in a moment of surprising honesty, admitted he wasn't sure of the answer to the final question that would have led to the ₱450,000 jackpot. 

He then proceeded to explain to the contestant why she should be grateful for the ₱40,000, citing her child's medical needs.

"Sure na kasi yan, ate," Ion declared, as if the contestant was about to throw the money back in his face. 

"Malaking bagay na rin kasi 'yan para sa pampagamot ng anak mo." (Translation: "Be grateful, lady! Your kid needs medicine!")

The internet, of course, ate it up. "Ion is a saint!" one commenter gushed. "He saved her from her own ungratefulness!"

Meanwhile, the contestant, now branded as "Pot o Li-Pot Grinch," has been forced to issue a public apology for not adequately expressing her joy. 

She's also reportedly been ordered to attend mandatory gratitude training sessions.

"I am truly sorry for not jumping up and down and screaming like a lunatic," she said in a tearful statement. 

"I promise to be more enthusiastic next time I win a small fortune on national television."

The moral of the story? In the Philippines, winning money is not enough. 

You must also perform the appropriate level of gratitude, lest you face the wrath of the internet and the judgment of a nation obsessed with televised displays of emotion. 

And remember, if you have a sick child, you'd better be extra grateful. 

Because, you know, priorities.


Saturday, March 21, 2026

Mike Defensor Discovers Corruption! (He's Shocked, Very Very Shocked!)

In a stunning turn of events, former Arroyo administration insider Mike Defensor has declared, with the wide-eyed innocence of a newborn babe, "I have never seen corruption like this!" 

The nation collectively gasped, choked on its coffee, and promptly Googled "Mike Defensor Arroyo Administration."

Apparently, Mr. Defensor has been living under a rock, or perhaps in a meticulously crafted bubble of selective amnesia, conveniently forgetting his tenure in an administration so riddled with scandals it could have been sponsored by the makers of Pepto-Bismol.

"It's like a pyromaniac suddenly expressing outrage at the prevalence of wildfires," one political analyst chuckled, "or a professional mime complaining about the lack of communication in modern society."

Defensor's declaration is a masterclass in performative amnesia, a comedic device so audacious it borders on performance art.

 He's essentially telling us, "I was there, but I didn't see anything! I was holding the flashlight!"

Let's take a stroll down memory lane, shall we? 

NBN-ZTE, Northrail, the fertilizer fund scandal, Malampaya revenues... these aren't just names, folks, they're badges of honor (or dishonor, depending on your perspective) for those who navigated the treacherous waters of the Arroyo administration. 

To suggest that today's alleged corruption is somehow worse is like saying the Titanic was a minor boating accident compared to a leaky faucet.

But fear not, dear readers, for satire is here to illuminate the absurdity of it all! 

Imagine the inner workings of Mr. Defensor's mind: a neatly folded conscience, freshly laundered and ironed for public consumption; a calendar that conveniently skips over the years 2001-2010; and a moral thermometer that only registers outrage when politically advantageous.

It's not just intellectual dishonesty, it's an aesthetic choice! 

Defensor is crafting a persona of righteous indignation, a mask he can slip on and off depending on the audience and the prevailing political winds. 

The truly hilarious part (if there's anything funny about the erosion of public trust) is that he's offering this mask as rehabilitation, not as a confession. 

He's not saying, "I messed up, I'm sorry." He's saying, "Look at me, I'm outraged! Vote for me!"

But beyond the laughter lies a chilling truth: this selective remembrance degrades accountability. 

If political actors can simply disavow their past, then responsibility becomes a negotiable commodity. 

We're left to sift through the lies and half-truths, desperately trying to discern reality from carefully crafted performance.

So, the next time you hear Mr. Defensor lamenting the state of corruption, remember the NBN-ZTE, remember the fertilizer fund, remember the Malampaya revenues. 

Remember that genuine moral authority is earned through acknowledgment, not theatrical indignation.

In conclusion, Mike Defensor's declaration is a comedic masterpiece, a testament to the power of selective amnesia. 

But it's also a stark reminder that the courage to condemn must begin with the courage to remember. And perhaps, just perhaps, a little bit of shame.

Satire: 18 Marines" Math Broke The Calculator

 


In the Hollywood hit Project Hail Mary, Ryan Gosling wakes up in deep space with amnesia and must save the world using advanced physics and sheer competence. 

In the Philippine political remake, eighteen "Marines" woke up in a press conference with collective amnesia regarding how math works, attempting to save their careers using high-level fiction and sheer audacity.

It was supposed to be a cinematic masterpiece—a P805- billion bribery scandal involving suitcases, secret deliveries, and a cast of characters that would make an HBO Max producer blush. 

Instead, the "Hail Mary" pass didn't just fall short; the quarterback tripped over the 50-yard line, and the ball deflated mid-air.

In sports, a Hail Mary is a desperate, low-probability play. 

In this case, the probability was so low that it actually hit zero and started digging. 

The group’s standing as principled whistleblowers hit a slight snag when the Navy pointed out a minor detail: four of the eighteen were never actually Marines, and the rest were mostly famous for being AWOL or dishonorably discharged.

It turns out, "Former Marine" is a very flexible title—much like titles like "The Ambassador of Buzz" or "Sales Ninja."

The script's biggest "plot hole" involves the laws of physics.

The group claimed to have delivered suitcases of cash to Leila de Lima while she was, well, in prison.

Unless these suitcases were equipped with teleportation technology or the Bureau of Corrections has a very liberal "Express Cash Delivery" policy for inmates, we are looking at a mathematical and physical impossibility. 

It’s a rookie mistake. Even Ryan Gosling’s character knew you can't be in two places at once—unless you're in a multiverse, which, to be fair, is where this ₱805-billion story seems to take place.

Then there’s the sheer scale of the ₱805 billion. Senator Ping Lacson, ever the party-pooper with his pesky "facts," pointed out that packing that much cash would take roughly five years of non-stop suitcase-stuffing.

Imagine the logistics:

  • Year 1: Packing the hundreds.

  • Year 2: Buying more Samsonite luggage because the first 500 broke.

  • Year 3: Developing chronic back pain from lifting "bribery bags."

  • Year 4: Still packing.

  • Year 5: Finally delivering the first installment.

By the time the bribe is fully delivered, the administration would have ended, the recipients would have retired, and the currency might have changed to Bitcoin.

The Office of the Ombudsman also flagged the Joint Affidavit. Apparently, all eighteen men shared one single memory. 

Usually, when eighteen people see the same thing, they have eighteen slightly different versions. 

But these guys? They have the synchronization of a K-Pop group.

It’s not a testimony; it’s a choral recitation. 

When eighteen people use the exact same adjectives to describe a suitcase delivery, you aren't looking at a "shared truth"—you’re looking at a shared Google Doc that someone forgot to "Track Changes" on.

 In a landscape where the "why" is just as important as the "what," the timing—coinciding perfectly with ICC probes and legislative inquiries into other dynasties—suggests this wasn't a mission to save the Earth, but a mission to save some very specific political skins.

If these eighteen individuals were truly "bagmen," they’ve managed to drop the bag, lose the handle, and trip over the contents in front of a live audience.

Friday, March 20, 2026

Selective Amnesia? Intellectual Dishonesty


The proclamation that "I have never seen corruption like this" is rhetorically powerful: it aspires to moral clarity, summons public indignation, and positions its speaker as an unblemished arbiter of propriety. 

Yet when such a claim is made by someone who once inhabited the inner corridors of an administration marked by recurring financial scandals, it cannot be understood as simple astonishment. 

It must be read as a performative amnesia—the comedic device of a public actor who forgets the script he once helped write. 

This essay satirically interrogates Mike Defensor’s declaration not to delegitimate his moral stance but to expose the intellectual dishonesty and selective memory that render such moral posturing hollow.

The historical record is inconvenient for any neat narrative of surprise. 

Under the Arroyo administration—where Defensor served as a close ally and chief aide—episodes such as the NBN-ZTE controversy, Northrail irregularities, the fertilizer fund scandal, and questions about Malampaya revenues became endemic topics of public scrutiny and institutional inquiry. 

Whether or not any individual bears criminal responsibility, these controversies collectively constitute a pattern of governance that invited—and demanded—critical reflection from those who staffed its apparatus. 

To imply that today's alleged lapses represent an unprecedented rupture is, at best, a rhetorical sleight of hand.

Satire enters when we imagine the rhetorical apparatus that enables such claims: a neatly folded conscience, aired and pressed for public display; a selective calendar that conveniently omits years that are inconvenient; and a moral thermometer that spikes only when political advantage aligns. 

The double standard is not merely an ethical weakness; it is an aesthetic choice, a cultivated persona of outrage that can be donned or doffed according to audience and partisan season. 

The laughable part—if there is anything laughable about the erosion of public trust—is that this mask is offered as rehabilitation rather than as confession.

Beyond the caricature lies a substantive peril. 

Public discourse that tolerates such selective remembrance degrades accountability. 

If political actors can disavow the moral landscapes in which they once operated, then standards of responsibility become negotiable commodities. 

Citizens are left to adjudicate truth from performance, and institutions suffer the cumulative effects of cynicism. 

A persuasive critique must therefore demand consistency: not only the exposure of contemporary malfeasance but also an honest reckoning with past complicity.

In sum, the proper response to assertions of unprecedented corruption by erstwhile insiders is neither cynicism nor credulous absolution but a disciplined demand for coherence. 

Satire here functions as a diagnosis: it reveals the absurdity of moral amnesia and insists that genuine moral authority is earned through acknowledgment, not theatrical indignation. 

If courage to condemn is genuine, it must begin with the courage to remember.


TV5 Serenades ABS-CBN with Love Songs: Is This a Rom-Com or a Horror Flick?



The Philippine entertainment scene is abuzz with whispers of a potential reunion more dramatic than a teleserye finale: TV5, the network that once dramatically dumped ABS-CBN over "creative differences" (read: late payments), is reportedly sending out feelers for another collaboration. 

Cue the dramatic music!

Sources say TV5, fresh off a fling with the ill-fated ALLTV (a rebound relationship that ended faster than you can say "ratings slump"), is now singing a sweet serenade to its former partner, ABS-CBN. 

Is this a genuine attempt at reconciliation, or just a desperate plea for relevance? 

The jury is still out, but the popcorn is definitely popping.

"It's like that ex who broke up with you because they thought they were too good for you, then suddenly shows up at your doorstep with flowers and a sob story," one industry insider quipped, "except the flowers are wilting and the sob story involves a lot of red ink."

Remember TV5's grand declaration of independence? 

The chest-thumping bravado about building their own empire? 

Apparently, building an empire is harder than it looks, especially when you're missing a crucial ingredient: an audience.

"They left ABS-CBN looking like a chicken with their head cut off, " and ALL TV was very much available that time, and despite their history (ALL TV buying everything they got), ABS-CBN was forced to reconcile with them because there was not other options left. 

One disgruntled viewer commented, "TV 5 was not ready to stand on their feet ... and it was a rude awakening when they realized they didn't have a kitchen to cook it in! 

Now they're scrambling for a recipe, any recipe!"

The ALLTV debacle, where ABS-CBN essentially crawled back to the Villar family after the TV5 split, is a particularly sore point.

 It's like going to your ex's rival's wedding just to prove you've moved on, only to end up spilling wine on the bride's dress and getting kicked out.

So, what's TV5 thinking? Are they genuinely remorseful for their past transgressions? 

Or are they just hoping ABS-CBN has a short memory and a forgiving heart (and a lot of spare content)?

"In case of delayed payments again, will they threaten to leave  ABS-CBN the second time around?" one skeptical observer asked. 

"This isn't a game of 'laban bawi' (fight-take back)! 

You can't just break up, realize you're nothing without your partner, and then expect them to welcome you back with open arms!"

The question on everyone's mind is: will ABS-CBN take TV5 back? 

Will they forgive and forget? Or will they slam the door in their face and leave TV5 to wallow in its own self-inflicted ratings crisis?

One thing's for sure: this potential reunion is shaping up to be the most dramatic plot twist of the year. 

Stay tuned, folks, because this is one teleserye that's just getting started. 

And remember, in the world of Philippine entertainment, anything is possible... even a network begging for forgiveness

Headline: Political Genius Discovers Revolutionary Loophole: Donate Before It Counts!


In a stunning display of legal acumen that would make even the most seasoned tax evader blush, former Congressman Marcoleta has apparently unlocked the secrets to campaign finance. 

Forget pesky things like transparency and accountability! 

The new strategy is so simple, so elegant, it's a wonder no one thought of it before: just tell your donors to donate before the campaign period!

Sources say the brilliance of this move lies in its sheer audacity. 

Why bother with all that messy disclosure when you can simply claim you received zero donations? 

It's like saying you didn't eat the cake because you devoured it all before the party started. Pure genius!

"It defies all logic!" exclaimed one bewildered political analyst, scratching their head so vigorously they nearly dislodged their toupee. 

"The donors get penalized for not disclosing, but the candidate who benefited from their generosity gets off scot-free? 

It's like fining the getaway car but giving the bank robber a medal!"

The implications are, of course, terrifying. 

Experts predict a surge in "pre-campaign" donations, transforming the political landscape into a fundraising free-for-all where the rich and powerful can funnel unlimited sums of money into their chosen candidates' coffers, all while maintaining a squeaky-clean image.

"We're talking about a potential tsunami of undisclosed funds," warned a concerned watchdog group, "a veritable Niagara Falls of dark money cascading into the political system. 

It's going to be glorious!"

Meanwhile, political strategists are scrambling to update their playbooks. "Forget grassroots movements," one strategist whispered, eyes gleaming with avarice. 

"We're going straight to the penthouse suites. 

Who needs volunteers when you have a pre-campaign war chest the size of a small country's GDP?"

So, there you have it, folks. 

The future of campaign finance is here, and it's gloriously, hilariously, and terrifyingly opaque. 

Get ready for the 2028 elections, where the only thing more abundant than campaign promises will be the undisclosed fortunes fueling them. 

And remember, it's not corruption if it happens before the campaign! (wink, wink)

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Wretired writer, Malayang Free Thinker, Probing Blogger, Disenteng Dissenter, Tempered temperamental, Liberal-Conservative, Grammar and Syntax Police, Pageant Connoisseur, Hibiscus Collector

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Satire: Analyzing The Analogy

  Mike Defensor, a man known for his political acrobatics and uncanny ability to land on his feet (or at least, near a microphone), has gift...

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