No drinking problem
It’s 8 p.m. on a weekend and the crowd at Matina Town Square (MTS) appears comfortably settled with their beers and pica-pica while watching the night’s featured bands.
It’s 8 p.m. on a weekend and the crowd at Matina Town Square (MTS) appears comfortably settled with their beers and pica-pica while watching the night’s featured bands.
INQUIRER Lifestyle flew to Davao City last weekend to observe its nightlife and how people have adapted to the liquor ban after midnight imposed by the local government since 2001.
Fans of Rex Navarrete as well as the plain curious won’t have to be disappointed that tickets to the Filipino-American standup comedian’s show on Nov. 21 at Teatrino have sold out. The good news is that he has agreed to extend his act one more night, on Nov. 25, at the same venue.
If too much nostalgia makes one feel older, perhaps just a bit of it can be rejuvenating.
Chad Borja had spent years in Manila and overseas pursuing his ambition to become a successful pop singer when he met Emy Gross in his birthplace in Cebu.
From the footwear of the crowd whose queue ended beyond the iron-grille gate of the PICC, then traversing past the walkway connecting the entrance lobby to the performance hall, one could discern that this audience was of a benevolent age.
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