In my career as a writer/ media person, I have worked at two ABS-CBN subsidiaries: Star Cinema and ABS-CBN Publishing. Since I am a freelance writer, I have been tapped in the past to do short-term projects by the broadcast network's other departments/subsidiaries such as marketing, PR, radio, sports, and SKYcable.
Through the years I have personally witnessed and experienced the Kapamilya culture.
Because of my numerous interactions with the company and its people, I believe I can describe what it's like to be part of the Philippines' biggest media company.
I started at ABS-CBN's Star Cinema right after college, a young graduate who was gung-ho on working in the movies. Back then, Star Cinema was a new film production outfit set to make a mark in the industry dominated by big studios.
The entire ABS-CBN TV production department was located on one floor, which also housed the private offices of the TV executives. ABS-CBN Talent Center was tiny 16-square meter space that had one desk and a sofa. Star Cinema's own office, located beside the mess hall, was a small room that could fit only four desks. The network had reopened seven years earlier and the exuberant, raring-to-go spirit was very palpable among the people who were there.
Perhaps one of the benefits of being in a small, growing organization was the accessibility to the company's bosses. A film production assistant (P.A.) like me could run into Ms. Charo Santos-Concio, then head of TV Production and Star Cinema's Executive Producer, in the corridor and ask her pointblank, "Will you still get me for the next movie?" She eventually did. I stayed as production assistant for two more films and as promotions coordinator for 20 more films.
In my four-year tenure at Star Cinema, I developed my skills in copywriting and promotions work, which laid the foundation for the career I now enjoy as an independent publicist. ABS-CBN's sister company also helped put food on my family's table. Not just through the salary that I took home every two weeks, but through the rice subsidies (one sack of rice) that I received every month.
In 2003, I found myself back at ABS-CBN; this time at its Publishing division. I was lucky to be offered to edit API's (ABS-CBN Publishing Inc.'s) first and only soap opera digest called Teleserye Mag, and then be part of the editorial team of API's lifestyle celebrity glossy, StarStudio Magazine.
The network had grown magnificently - as epitomized by the impressive 15-story Eugenio Lopez, Jr. (ELJ) Building. Still, access to our bosses, particularly Ma'am Charo (who was then head of ABS-CBN Entertainment) and Ms. Cory Vidanes (who was then head of TV Production), was simply a phone call away. CSC (Ma'am Charo's initials) and CVV (Tita Cory's initials) always had time for our team; they never turned down our interview requests.
One of my favorite anecdotes about Tita Cory I like telling is how she continued to eat in ABS-CBN's main building cafeteria even when she was already a network executive. To me, Tita Cory's action signified that she, a former production assistant, was one with the rank-and-file.
The cafeteria in the main building was the venue for monthly forums with then ABS-CBN President and Chairman Mr. Eugenio Lopez III a.k.a. EL III a.k.a. Sir Gabby. Called the "Kapihan with the Chairman," employees and talents were welcome to attend the gathering and air their concerns. Those who had to stay in their respective offices due to work could watch the forum on their computers and send messages since it was aired through the office intranet.
I have vague recollections of what transpired during these Kapihans. We were always busy at the magazine. But I do remember sending a comment questioning why there were separate lanes at the cafeteria for on-retainer talents and regular employees. Talents like myself, I said, should not be "second-class citizens" in the same company.
I did not think what I said would make much of a difference. A few days later, our editorial assistant, Manila, reported that the cafeteria lanes had been abolished and talents could line up anywhere we wished. "It's because of the comment you made," she told me.
I cannot categorically claim credit for that. But what I can say with absolute certainty is that ABS-CBN's leaders -- the executives--do listen to the people under them.
Around 2008, I resigned from the magazine because there was going to be a reorganization. The new editor-in-chief was bringing his own team. In the process, I was going to be demoted from associate editor to staff writer. My pride was hurt and I emailed my sentiments to one of my bosses.
To my surprise, she called me on my cellphone and said that the division's head was going to hear me out. I got my audience with the division's head who listened sympathetically to me. I said I didn't want my old job back. I just wanted someone to know what I went through.
That unfortunate incident is now water under the bridge. Show me a company or organization that does not have politics, intrigue and deficiencies, and I will show you a company that does not exist. Like my late mom had told me — every family has its own dysfunction. Businesses are no different.
But every family has its blessing or grace.
At ABS-CBN, this grace comes in the form of the Lopez Achievement Awards (LAA), an annual competition among the Lopez Group of Companies to which the media company belongs to. LAA is like the holy grail that Lopez companies aspire for. More than the trophies and the jackets that team members of the winning companies get as prizes, it's the honor that brings greater pride.
For some years, I have helped co-write LAA nomination write-ups for SKYcable, which is a company under ABS-CBN.
Separate teams would tell me their success stories and best projects and how hard they worked to meet their objectives to bring awe and delight to their customers. Listening to their stories always got me inspired. Anyone who's ever felt disillusioned by big business or lacked a sense of purpose at work will find renewed hope and direction. To the employees of SKY, it is hardly about the bottom line. Instead, it is about being of service. My SKY-subscriber friends who've been assisted by my contacts at SKY can attest that service is a commitment that the cable/internet company takes very seriously.
Without a doubt, ABS-CBN has made a big impact on my professional life and personal life.
Humility. Openness. Service. These are the legacies of my days as a Kapamilya.
Note: I wrote this article for StarStudio Magazine in 2014, and I remember it now as I struggle to create another commissioned work. Writing is never easy, even for professional writers. But through the years, I have realised that I do write better when I love, when I deeply care about that significant other who not only inspires me but helps me see the world, my work, the people I meet and talk with, in a softer, gentler, more caring perspective. And that's how I know it's real love —when I become more loving, more patient, more appreciative of life.
GOD'S WILL
How TV executive Linggit Tan and businessman Rommel
Marasigan found love in mid-life
On July 5, 2014, ABS-CBN Business Unit Head for Comedy
Florida “Linggit” Tan exchanged wedding vows with businessman Rommel Marasigan
at the Christian Church Gospel Center on Quezon Avenue. The bride, 54, was
resplendent in her Avel Bacudio gown while the groom, who turned 55 a day
before, was spiffy in his silver grey suit with red bow tie, also by Bacudio. The
grand ceremony was a bigger celebration of the intimate civil marriage held a
year before in Submarine Garden in Lobo, Batangas.
Linggit or LT, as she is fondly called in ABS-CBN, is the
executive responsible for many of the network’s most notable comedy shows: the
currently airing “Goin’ Bulilit,” “Luv U,” and “Home Sweetie Home,” and “Home
Along Da Riles” that starred Comedy King Dolphy. Rommel, meanwhile, is a former
nurse in the US. He was married for 12 years to an American lady with whom he
has a son aged 23, and a daughter, 19. Both Linggit and Rommel previously
thought that they were going to spend the rest of their lives as singles.
Yet as Rommel and Linggit confidently pledged their love in
front of 250 their family and friends, it was clear that they were meant to be
together. “Siguro destiny,” is
Rommel’s explanation as to why they fell in love.
Beach house dream
When Linggit was in college in 1980, she stayed in Mindoro
for some days to research about the Mangyan tribe. The picturesque environment
made an impact on the young student. “Tumira
ako sa malapit sa dagat. May
beach sa harapan at maybundok sa likod,” she recalls. “Doon nabuo ang dream ko na magkaroon ng beach house.”
That wish of hers remained when she began working in the
broadcast industry. Whenever she taped a show in a beach location, she would
check out the place to see if it could be the site of her future rest house.
Since 2004, Linggit had been actively looking for a property to buy. She
consulted real estate agents and asked co-workers in show business—including
Tito Dolphy— for beach properties near Metro Manila. Whenever she got a lead,
she would bring along her nephews and nieces and friends to assess its
potential.
“Marami na talaga
akong lugar na naikot,” says Linggit. Her pursuit brought her to different spots
in Cavite and Batangas. A couple of years ago, she was about to purchase a land
in Calatagan, Batangas but she did not push through because the title had some
legal impediments.
Paradise found
In 2012, Linggit’s search finally led her to talking to
actor Gabby Concepcion, an avowed beach lover. The TV executive recalls that at
the contract signing for the teleserye
“Kapag Puso’y Nasugatan,” Gabby quickly took out his cellphone and showed
photos of his beach house in Lobo, Batangas. Linggit says, “Sabi ko kay Gabby, ‘Sige, ihanap mo nga ako ng property diyan.’”
Weeks later, some time in May 2012, Gabby advised Linggit to
take a look at a 2,000-sqm beachfront lot in Lobo. The land was being sold by
the Marasigans who also owned the Submarine Garden Resort located nearby.
Linggit visited the lot with her older brother Santiago and liked it
immediately. It was exactly what she wanted. “’Yung may tubig sa harap at may bundok sa likod,” she says with a
smile.
On her next excursion to Lobo, she brought along Skylight
Films executive producer Enrico Santos and ABS-CBN headwriter Joel Mercado who
were also looking for a property for their respective beach houses. Enrico and Joel also liked the place so the
three—Linggit, Enrico and Joel—decided to talk to the seller as a group to haggle
for a good price.
Hard bargain
They met and negotiated with Mrs. Erlinda Marasigan and her
53-year old son Rommel, a nurse who worked in Los Angeles and returned to the
Philippines around 2002. Linggit recalls
that although Rommel and his mother were hospitable (“Pinakain nila kami ng piniritong saging!” says Linggit.), they were
not so keen on selling the property at the price that she requested. “Tumatawad kami pero ayaw pumayag!” says
Linggit.
“Binabarat kasi kami!”
Rommel quickly replies with a smile.
No deal was made during that meeting but Rommel, the
resort’s manager, promised to keep in touch with them. He recalls Linggit
giving him a business card. When he informed the rest of his family about
meeting her, they told him that she was one of ABS-CBN’s top executives. “Sino ba itong Linggit Tan? Taga-ABS-CBN daw… Pero hindi ko siya kilala,” he
insists. “Wala akong TFC (The
Filipino Channel) sa States. Hindi ako
nanonood ng Channel 2 dahil HBO at
ESPN lang ang pinapanood ko.”
Timely SMS
In the middle of 2012, Linggit took a leave of absence from
work because she was diagnosed with Stage 1 breast cancer. She underwent a
mastectomy on July 4, 2012. Two days later, on July 6, Linggit received a text
message from Rommel informing her that his mother had agreed to sell the
property at the requested price. She says, “Hindi
naman alam ni Rommel na inoperahan
ako. Hindi konamansinasabi.”
The TV exec had barely recovered from surgery when she asked
her brother Santiago to go with her to Lobo to close the deal. “Kaya kahit may masakit pa sa akin,niyaya ko ang Kuya ko para ibigay namin ang earnest
money.”
Welcome break
As soon as she was strong enough, Linggit initiated the
building of her rest house on the newly bought property. She was allowed a
six-month leave by the network to recuperate. Linggit took the break as a
chance to make her long-time dream a reality. She stayed at the Submarine
Garden Resort to keep a close eye on the construction. “Tumiraako sa isa sa mga cottage
sa resort,” says Linggit. “Sabi ko rerentahan ko sa kanila. Pero ayaw magpabayad ng mommy ni Rommel.”
Linggit ended up spending more time at the resort than
Rommel who was usually at the resort only on weekends. The good-humored Rommel
says, “Si Linggit ang naging bantay. Sabi ko sa kanya, siya na muna ang bahala…”
Extra thoughtful
Actually, it was Rommel who took care of Linggit. Aside from
helping her find workers and source construction materials, he also accompanied
Linggit when she went to the beach to jog and snorkel.
Not only that. Rommel became extra thoughtful. “Nagluluto siya ng masarap na breakfast,”
says Linggit. “Pagkatapos kongmag-snorkel, meron na siyang nakahandang breakfast para sa amin.” Linggit adds that there was also a time that Rommel
loaned to her a vest. “N’ung nakita
niyang gusto ko ang dagat, pinahiram niya ako ng vest. Kaya naging mas madali na akong makapag-snorkel ng malayo.”
One jogging session turned hilarious as Linggit relates. “Kapag nagjo-jogging kasiako sa beach, barefoot ako. Kaya ganun din ang ginawa ni Rommel. Nakatapak siyang bato at
nasugatan. Ginamot ko at dinala namin sa ospital… Hindi pala siya sanay na mag-jogging na nakatapak!”
Meeting Lola
Initially, Linggit thought that Rommel’s thoughtfulness was
just part of being a good host. She began to realize that there was something
more when, in October 2012, she got caught in a storm and Submarine Garden was
inaccessible by land. Linggit was left alone in the resort. “Hindi ako mapuntahan ni Rommel. Doon siya nag-worry,” says Linggit. “Tawag nang tawag. Ang kulit-kulit! Sabi ko,
‘Huwag ka nang tatawag. Paubos na battery ko!’”
Although the TV exec could be very mataray, Rommel appreciated how Linggit’s kindness won his mom
over. He says of Linggit, “Mabait kasi
siya. Mabilis na nagingkasundo ng mommy ko.”
He expressed his intention to court Linggit on November 1
when he asked her to accompany him to the cemetery. “Dinala niya ako sa puntod ng lola niya. ‘Pinakilala’ako sa lola niya,” Linggit recalls.
Even though she had some inkling, Linggit was still
surprised by Rommel’s move. Being single for some time, courtship—much less
marriage—was farthest from her mind. She admits, “Ang tanda ko na n’on. Fifty-two na
ako noong 2012. Hindi ko iniisip.Hindi ako sanay (na ligawan).”
Iron chef
Their courtship comprised of reading books, watching movies,
taking walks on the beach, and studying the Bible. And having long talks. When
Linggit returned to work at ABS-CBN, the two attended events together such as stylist
Eric Pe Benito’s charity activity for the cancer patients of the Philippine
Orthopedic Hospital.
Linggit, a devout Christian, says, “Nagkukuwentuhan kami ni Rommel gabi-gabitungkol sa Bible. Naikukuwento ko sa kanya ‘yung tungkol sa
salita ng Diyos.” Eventually, Rommel became a Christian.
She was especially touched when she saw Rommel cooking for a
party they organized for the students of an elementary school located near the
resort. “Siya ang nagluto ng
spaghetti,” she says of Rommel. “Nakita
ko kung paano siya naghahalo (ng
sauce at noodles) saisang
malaking kawan. Ang hirap pala!”
Rommel chuckles, “Napasubo
ako doon!”
Recalling how the bald-headed Rommel was quite a presence in
the kitchen, Linggit says, “Ang laking
tao nagluluto! Doon ko naisip, ‘Ah, seryoso ito sa panliligaw!’”
He then looks at Linggit and quips, “Hindi naman para sa iyo ‘yun… para sa mgabata!”
Three more years?
The ligawan and
getting-to-know-you periods were short. By December 18, Linggit said “yes” to
Rommel. The two proceeded to planning their life together. “Siyempre matanda na kami. Gusto na naming magpakasal,” she
explains.
Linggit and Rommel were planning to get married in January
2013 but they were advised to delay it. “Sabi
ng kapatid niya, maghintay pa daw
kami ng three years.Long time ang three years!” says Rommel. He adds
in jest that both he and Linggit would be eligible for senior citizen cards by
then. “Baka libre na kami sa Mercury
Drug!”
“God will make a way”
Linggit understood why her family was very protective. She
says, “Ang issue kasi nilamatanda na akoat ayaw nilang masaktan ako. Divorcee si Rommel at hindinaman niya ikinaila
‘yung nakaraan niya… Natakot ang mga
kapatid ko para sa akin.”
She admits that Rommel had a made mistakes in his life but he
is now a changed man.
The couple also faced another setback. Rommel’s older
brother Mar, a colonel and a bomb expert, was diagnosed with Stage 4 lung
cancer in January 2013. Because of that, Linggit felt that it was inappropriate
to get married then. “Parang hindi
maganda na ikakasal kami na merong maysakit sa pamilya. Hindi kami pwedeng
magsaya habang merong nahihirapan.”
The two found comfort in believing that if God brought them
together, the Almighty One will also make a way for them. Linggit reflects, “Kapag ginusto ni Lord, matutuloydin.” Linggit and Rommel
decided to wait.
Buking!
By July 2013, the cyst in Mar’s lung had shrunk remarkably.
Linggit relates, “Parang sign sa amin na pwede na kaming magpakasal kasi
okay na si Kuya Mar. Nagbalak na kaming mag-apply for a
marriage license.”
The couple requested Linggit’s driver to obtain the marriage
application form from the Lobo Municipal Hall.The driver brought it to Linggit and Rommel who were supervising the
construction of Linggit’s rest house. But then the driver dropped the envelope
containing the document in the construction site. The foreman saw the marriage
application form and immediately informed Linggit’s Kuya Santiago. The boo-boo
was like a scene straight out of an ABS-CBN sitcom. Linggit could only giggle
at the recollection. “Sinumbong kami!
Para kaming mga 18 years old.”
Rommel also found the turn of events hilarious. “Tawa ako nang tawa! To think na sa Las Vegas, may drive-thru wedding!”
The Tan family, however, did not find the situation a
laughing matter. “Nagalit angpamilya,” Linggit reveals. “Ang usapan daw kasi maghihintay kami ng
two to three years.”
Flock of birds
However, Linggit clarifies that she and Rommel never
intended to keep their wedding a secret. They were just waiting for the right
time to tell her family. She surmised that since her family was unsupportive,
perhaps their wedding was not yet part of God’s plan. “Kung God’s will talaga,
kailangan walang kokontra,” Linggit explains. “Kaya nagdasal ako. Hiniling ko sa Diyo na kung kagustuhan Niya na
makasal kami ni Rommel, bigyan niya ako ng sign.”
While jogging around the poolside of the Quezon City
condominium building where she lived, Linggit saw a flock of birds hovering far
away. “Sabi ko, ‘Lord, sana bigyanmo ako ng signkung itutuloy
namin ang kasal… Kapag yung birds
sa malayo lumipadsa harap ko, ibig sabihin n’on pumapayag ka na ituloy namin…’”
Linggit relates excitedly that she got her answer right
away. “Maya-maya,lumapit nga yung birds sa harap ko!”
The TV executive wanted to be sure so she requested for the
same sign again when she paid a visit to her family in Marikina. “Pinagdasal
ko na sana makita ko ulit ‘yung
flock of birds.”
As she was standing outside the Tans’ home, waiting for the
helper to open the gate, a flock of white birds flew right in front of her.
The white birds, plus the fact that the new mayor of Lobo was
available to officiate the wedding, gave the couple impetus to proceed.
Pamamanhikan
A few days before the July 8, 2013 civil wedding ceremony in
Lobo, Linggit and Rommel had a formal pamamanhikan
at a Quezon City resto with their respective immediate families in attendance.
Rommel had prepared a speech of what he would say to the Tan family to prove
his love and devotion to Linggit. When the actual moment came, he forgot
everything. “Sabi ko ganito na lang,
‘Iimbitahin sana namin kayo sa kasal..
Sana umattend kayo.’”
Linggit shared with her family the story about the
appearances of the flock of white birds. She declares, “Sabi ko sa kanila, ‘May
assurance ako from God nagustoNiyangmatuloy ang kasal kasi ito ang signs na binigay Niya.’ Na-appreciate
naman nila. Hindi na sila pumigil sa amin… Everything came to place.”
Her ‘Dolphin’
Some time in early 2013 immediately after they officially
became a couple, Linggit introduced Rommel to ABS-CBN President Charo
Santos-Concio. The network big boss then asked Rommel if he wooed Linggit the
traditional way by serenading her and doing “hard labor” like chopping wood (pagsisibak ng kahoy) and fetching water
from the well (pag-iigib ng tubig).
“Pag-iigib ng tubig?”
Rommel balked, incredulous at the network boss’ question. “Ano ako, water district? May
faucet kami (sa resort) noh!” he quipped.
At once Ma’am Charo knew why Rommel had won Linggit’s heart.
Linggit recalls that Ma’am Charo said, “Alam
ko na kung bakit in love na in
love si Linggit. He makes her laugh!
She finally found Dolphy in him.’”
Another ABS-CBN executive who was at the same meeting,
Creative Communications Management Head Robert Labayen, heard incorrectly and
thought that Ma’am Charo said dolphin instead of Dolphy. Since then, “Dolphin”
had become Linggit’s term of endearment for Rommel.
Pledge of love
In the vow she read aloud at the July 2014 wedding ceremony,
Linggit spoke of how Rommel, her “Dolphin,” has made her happier. She said to
him, “When you came into my life, it was one of the saddest moments in my life.
It was right after I was operated on for cancer. A week after, my Tito Dolphy
died. But you made me laugh with your natural wit and humor… Isa kang Dolphin!”
As Linggit pledged to be untiring in her love and support
for Rommel, he promised to remain honest, caring and good to her. “I wanna grow
old by your side,” he reiterated.
This couple says that the best thing about finding love in
middle age is that maturity has afforded them to be more honest and understanding.
“Mas magandaang communication kapag nasa
ganitong age ka na,” Rommel
underscores. “Talagang honest na sa isa’t-isa.”
While their love might not possess the kilig or fervor of youthful romance, the passion it holds is deep,
lasting and secure. Linggit confidently describes their love this way: “Alam na namin kung anong gusto namin at
ayaw. Wala nang best foot forward. Alam
nakasi namin na last leg of our
life na ito.”