Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
As a satire of the MCGI's conflicts with the Iglesia ni Cristo (INC), the show featured a sister sketch—May Tama Kami (lit. "We Are Correct", but also "We Are Nuts")—a parody of the INC show Ang Tamang Daan where hosts played by Bayani Agbayani and Herbert Bautista rebuked Brod Pete's teachings through nursery rhymes and children's folk tales.
Natin99 is the sixth studio album by the Philippine alternative rock band Eraserheads, released on May 18, 1999 by BMG Records (Pilipinas), Inc.. The album was recorded in a nonlinear approach, with the members recording their individual parts separately and mixing them together in the studio.
As per the band members, Siakol is a term they coin which pertains to a "free, happy and sometimes naughty state of mind". It is also alluded to be a word play of jakol, Filipino slang for masturbation.
Wow Mali: Doble Tama (transl. Wow Wrong: Double Hit) (formerly Wow Mali, Wow Maling Mali, Wow Meganon, Wow Mali Pa Rin! and Wow Mali! Lakas ng Tama) is a Philippine television comedy show broadcast by ABC/TV5. Originally hosted by Joey de Leon, it aired on ABC from May 25, 1996 to August 2, 2008. The show returned to TV5 from February 22, 2009 ...
They may be varied by the addition of sevenths (or other scale degrees) to any chord or by substitution of the relative minor of the IV chord to give, for example, I–ii–V. This sequence, using the ii chord , is also used cadentially in a common chord progression of jazz harmony , the so-called ii–V–I turnaround .
The Word & Picture format ran from May 5, 2008, to April 8, 2009. The show started with the elimination round. 30 contestants were situated in the gallery, one of which was the defending champion. A contestant was randomly chosen to answer a question, and they were eliminated if they did not answer or answered incorrectly.
Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. Find sources: "List of Philippine television shows" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR ( August 2019 ) ( Learn how and when to remove this message )
Ako'y may alaga" (transl. " I have a pet " ; occasionally referred to as " Asong mataba " or " Ang aking alaga ") is a Filipino poem in the Tagalog language of unknown authorship taught in elementary schools across the Philippines , typically in Kindergarten and grade 1.