Glider Content

Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Journo (TV5) - 27 December 2011


Nasaan ka Elisa? - 27 December 2011



PS I Love You (TV5) - 27 December 2011


Survivor Philippines Celebrity Doubles Showdown - 27 December 2011


My Binondo Girl - 27 December 2011



Wil Time Big Time (TV5) - 27 December 2011


Munting Heredera - 27 December 2011


Amaya - 27 December 2011


Budoy - 27 December 2011



Ikaw ay Pag-ibig - 27 December 2011



24 Oras - 27 December 2011


TV Patrol World - 27 December 2011






Maria la del Barrio - 27 December 2011


Aksyon Balita (TV5) - 27 December 2011


Daldalita - 27 December 2011


Reputasyon - 27 December 2011


T3: Kapatid Sagot Kita! (TV5) - 27 December 2011


Face To Face (TV5) - 27 December 2011


Pinoy Big Brother Unlimited (Season 4) UnliDay - 27 December 2011



Kung Aagawin Mo Ang Langit - 27 December 2011


Angelito - 27 December 2011



Ikaw Lang Ang Mamahalin - 27 December 2011


Helena's Promise - 27 December 2011



Kokak - 27 December 2011


Eat Bulaga - 27 December 2011


Happy Yipee Yehey - 27 December 2011




Showtime (Best of 2011) - 27 December 2011






Balitaang Tapat (TV5) - 27 December 2011


The Buelta Force (1986 - Chiquito, Babalu, Cachupoy, Dencio Padilla)


Gellicious (TV5) - 27 December 2011


Love You - 27 December 2011


Government treatment of Arroyo fair, 7 of 10 Filipinos think


The Aquino government’s treatment of former President and now Pampanga Representative Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo regarding the cases she is facing has been “only fair,” according to seven out 10 Filipinos (69 percent) nationwide in a Social Weather Stations survey.

The Fourth Quarter Social Weather Report also said that 17 percent of respondents believed government had been “too harsh,” while 13 percent said government had been “too lenient.”

Arroyo spent Christmas at Veterans Memorial Medical Center in Quezon City, where she is detained on nonbailable electoral sabotage charges.

The survey asked respondents to complete the following statement: “What is your opinion about the administration’s treatment of former President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo regarding the cases that she is facing? Would you say that the treatment of the administration has been…”

Three options

They were presented with three options: “Too harsh,” “too lenient” and “only fair.”

The survey also found that nearly three of four adult Filipinos (73 percent) had “little trust” in Arroyo. With only 11 percent expressing “much trust” in her, Arroyo’s net trust rating plunged to a “very bad” minus-62 (much trust minus little trust), down from minus-40 (19 percent much trust, 59 percent little trust) in June.

This was even lower than Arroyo’s “record-low” of minus-52 (16 percent much trust, 68 percent little trust) posted in November last year, according to the survey, results of which were first reported in BusinessWorld on Monday.

Socioeconomic classes

Majorities across areas also believed that the government’s treatment of the former President had been “only fair”—79 percent in Mindanao, 78 percent in Metro Manila, 66 percent in Balance Luzon and 59 percent in the Visayas.

Majorities across socioeconomic classes also held a similar view—71 percent among class ABC, 69 percent among class D and 69 percent among class E—as did 71 percent among men and 68 percent among women.

Eighty-two percent among college graduates, 70 percent among high school graduates, 68 percent among elementary graduates, and 63 percent among those who have attended some elementary or no schooling at all also believed that government treatment of Arroyo had been “only fair.”

Twenty-four percent in the Visayas, 17 percent in Luzon outside Metro Manila, 15 percent in Mindanao and 10 percent in Metro Manila said the government’s treatment of Arroyo had been “too harsh” while 16 percent in Luzon outside Metro Manila, 15 percent in the Visayas, 12 percent in Metro Manila and 5 percent in Mindanao said the government had been “too lenient.”

Among class E, 17 percent said government had been “too harsh,” along with 16 percent among class D and 15 percent among class ABC. Fourteen percent among class ABC said government had been “too lenient,” as did 13 percent among class D and 12 percent among class E.

Little trust

Among those who had “little trust” in Arroyo, 76 percent said government treatment had been “only fair,” while 77 percent said government had been “too lenient.” Fifty-nine percent of those who had “little trust” in her said government had been “too harsh” on her.

Among those who said government treatment of Arroyo had been “only fair,” 73 percent were satisfied with President Benigno Aquino III, while only 12 percent were dissatisfied. Satisfaction with the President was lower among those who said government had been “too harsh” on Arroyo (69 percent) or “too lenient” (60 percent), SWS also noted.

The survey, conducted from December 3 to December 7, used face-to-face interviews with 1,200 adults. It had a margin of error of plus-or-minus 3 percentage points. Inquirer Research

Mel Gibson Loses Half of His $850 Million Fortune to Ex-Wife in Divorce


Mel Gibson is not only single, but $425 million poorer, thanks to a divorce settlement finalized Friday between the actor and his wife of 31 years, Robyn Denise Moore.

The judgment, finalized by a judge in Los Angeles, keeps virtually all details of the settlement secret. People magazine reports that the couple did not have a prenuptial agreement, meaning his ex-wife would be entitled to half of everything Gibson earned during their marriage.

The Oscar-winner’s fortune has been estimated to be as high as $850 million, the magazine said, citing a 2006 report in the Los Angeles Business Journal.

Throughout the 31-year marriage, which produced seven children, Gibson directed, invested and starred in movies such as “The Passion of the Christ,” which grossed more than $600 million alone. He also invested heavily in real estate, including an island in Fiji he bought for $15 million in 2005.

People also reports that Moore, a former dental nurse, is entitled to half of any film residuals Gibson receives for the rest of his life.

Moore, 55, filed for divorce from Gibson, also 55, in 2009. The two met in the late 1970s, when they were both tenants in a house in Adelaide, Australia. Of their seven children only one, a 12-year-old son, is a minor and therefore subject to a custody agreement.

The divorce, which will take effect Jan. 9, is believed to be the biggest celebrity divorce payout in Hollywood history. Director Steven Spielberg paid an estimated $100 million to Amy Irving in their 1989 divorce.

Gibson’s divorce payout and the potential custody battle that lies ahead comes on the heels of the $750,000 he agreed to pay to Oksana Grigorieva, his former girlfriend and mother of his toddler daughter, Lucia, in August.

The two, who split last April, were engaged in a bitter custody dispute that included leaked recordings that sounded like Gibson engaged in a racist and sexist tirade, and Grigorieva accusing Gibson of domestic violence.

The “Braveheart” star pleaded no contest to a misdemeanor battery charge involving Grigorieva in March. The Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department also investigated allegations of attempted extortion by Grigorieva, but she was never charged.

Robyn Moore came to her now ex-husband’s defense in the battery case, filing a brief declaration that Gibson had never physically abused her or their children.

Why are Pacquiao’s fans so happy about Mayweather going to jail?


By Chris Williams: When you look around in the comment section of boxingnews24.com you’ll notice that Manny Pacquiao’s fans are in a collective celebratory mood about Floyd Mayweather Jr’s 90 day jail term, which begins on January 6th next year and will keep him out of action for the first quarter of next year.

Mayweather had been hoping to get a fight with Pacquiao in May, but that’s an impossibility now with his jail term. What I’m trying to understand now is why Pacquiao’s fans so happy about Mayweather going to jail when it means that he won’t be able to fight Pacquiao anytime soon. Now why would Pacquiao’s fans be ecstatic about Mayweather being sidelined by a jail term?

It just seems to me that Pacquiao’s fans really don’t believe he can beat Mayweather and are happy that he’s out of the way for three months so Pacquiao can continue to beat up the fading fighters that his promoter Bob Arum has been matching him up with over and over again. We’ve already see Pacquiao beat up an old Oscar De La Hoya, an old Shane Mosley, a shot Ricky Hatton, a near shot Miguel Cotto, a shot Antonio Margarito and a never really was Joshua Clottey.

Mayweather was hoping to fight Pacquiao give him a real test for once, but now that’s not going to happen anytime soon. So what are Pacquiao’s fans happy about that? Well, I think it’s flat out relief that their hero Pacquiao won’t be getting his backside whipped Mayweather and they don’t care how Mayweather is taken out of commission, just as long as he’s removed as a threat to Pacquiao. It’s sad really to see fans who’d rather worship an untested fighter than one that has actually been tested and has proven himself as being worthy of the adoration. All those catchweight fights and titles won against fighters I’ve never ever heard of half the time and he finally is about to be tested, the fight is taken away by a jail term by his opponent. And Pacquiao’s are happy about this. Why? I guess they don’t have faith in him, that’s what I think.

Kris TV - 27 December 2011




Unang Balita - 27 December 2011


Juicy! (TV5) - 26 December 2011


I-Witness - 26 December 2011


Bandila - 26 December 2011




Saksi - 26 December 2011


Pinoy Big Brother Unlimited (Season 4) UnliNight - 26 December 2011




Aksyon Journalismo (TV5) - 26 December 2011


Dong Yi - 26 December 2011







Wanted (TV5) - 26 December 2011


PS I Love You (TV5) - 26 December 2011


Nasaan ka Elisa? - 26 December 2011



Survivor Philippines Celebrity Doubles Showdown - 26 December 2011


Glamorosa (TV5) - 26 December 2011


Wil Time Big Time (TV5) - 26 December 2011


Munting Heredera - 26 December 2011