It is not exactly a happy decade for the Philippines considering that it was during this decade when several natural and man-made calamities and disasters engulfed the country's resources, such as the eruption of Mt. Pinatubo, the tremendously strong earthquake that destroyed many parts of northern, central, and southern Luzon, the super typhoons Rosing (1995) and Loleng (1998), the Asian currency crisis, and of course the election of former President Joseph Estrada into office, along side the election of former President Gloria-Macapagal Arroyo as his Vice President which would then usher us to one of the worst recent decades in the country's history.
But let bygones be bygones. Alas, I find myself looking back to those days when cellular phones were like ice shavers, when landline party lines were a big issue in households, when telephone booths were as precious as the cellphones nowadays, when the cheapest internet connection was 30-35 pesos per hour, when the buses along EDSA are like individual cab units of MRT and LRT now, and so much more.
The 90s may not exactly be one of the best decades in terms of political and business criteria, but there are things from this era which I had been wishing were back, resurrected, or has an existing counterpart in this millennium's fast-pased, DSL-driven world. Some of them are here:
4. Morning kiddie shows - Back then, my peers and I would all be looking forward and waiting for vacation season because it was this time when we got to watch the shows that make us all cry: Sarah, Ang Munting Prinsesa, Cedy, Ang Munting Prinsipe, Remy, The Dog of Flanders and many more. These shows were a way for us to learn certain values which allowed us to become better people. Teenagers nowadays don't get to watch shows like this. I wish they'd play them again. Who would forget Miss Minchin? We even had a game about Princess Sarah. It goes something like... "Miss Amelia, takot sa pusa (afraid of cats), Miss Minchin mukhang pera (worldy person)."
5. Weekend street games - To train ourselves to become tough, to remain fit, and at the same time to enjoy weekend mornings, the 90s kids played a lot of games which involved a lot of strategy, strength, and stamina (not to mention sour sweat) such as: Shake, Shake Shampoo; Langit, Lupa; Monkey, Monkey Annabelle; Manga, manga; and so many other games. All these games were played with one kid being the it. His/her task is to touch or catch someone else who would become it. These games trained us sportsmanship and at the same time has allowed us to become, in our own respect, lawmakers. I remember when my friends would give out all the rules before the game started and there would be others who would appeal and question the logic of the rules. This is probably why many of my peers and contemporaries are very creative and are little by little dominating various scenes in the entertainment industry. Anyhow, let me not fail to mention the games we called Text and Pog.
I know that the 90s kids or people did not have the best fashion sense (oversized shirts and pants, bandanas, bad-ass, grunge look, wedges, boots, tucked in polos coupled with 501s) but the 90s ushered in so many things in the popular culture scene which until this very day I wish I savored more.
bat walang boybands? hehehe
ReplyDeletei am making a different music version altogether.
ReplyDeleteI AGREE!
ReplyDeleteI've always thought like this timmy!