Dubai’s Most Popular Water Ride, Jumeirah Sceirah Closed Down

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This photo puzzles me on what they’re sad about, until they say…

Wild Wadi’s signature water ride, the 13 years old Jumeirah Sceirah is now forever gone. According to their Facebook Page, they had to take it down to give way to something new and as thrilling adventures.  The park is closed since 11th January and will reopen at the end of the month.

Here’s a short clip of letting go of an iconic slide in the Emirates:

Surely high expectations are up for what the replacements would be. Follow them on Facebook to get hooked of the developments.  

AED 20 Fine Per Day For Not Applying For Emirates ID Card?

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Ok, fine! What?

Got an email from a colleague that a strict fine is being implemented since 1st January 2012 for citizens and resident expats who fail to apply for the Emirates ID Card. The fine is ‘currently limited’ for those who are working in government and semi-government offices.

Apparently, the old news is true, isn’t it?  Everyday from Jan 1, AED 20 is charged against those who don’t have the EID yet. Though, the fine’s ceiling is AED 1000.

So if you’re one of us, EID fee (AED 100-300, depending on the issuance of your visa) + AED 30 processing fee + fine is now the total cost of Emirates ID Application. Tindi!

So I’m gonna rush to the typing and application centre tomorrow morning to halt my fine to AED 320 (16 days). I’ll confirm this with another post tomorrow.

I bet some Typing Centres don’t know about this implementation. One centre said there’s no fines being implemented, while another is unsure.

So to avoid any inconveniences and hefty fines, go to the nearest EID centre at the soonest possible time.

Getting Husband-sponsor Visa in Just 1 hour

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Last Thursday, I applied for my wife’s visa under my sponsorship and surprised that I got it in just an hour. I went to a Typing Centre complete with all the documents required:

  1. Copies of our passports
  2. Copy of my visa
  3. Arabic Salary Certificate with company stamp (or copy of employment contract)
  4. Copy of marriage contract authenticated by UAE Ministry of Foreign Affairs
  5. Copy of tenancy contract (on my name)
  6. 2 passport photos of my wife
We’re the only customer in the typing centre so it just took about 10 minutes to finish the typing.  We went to Ministry of Naturalization and Residency at the dnata building in Deira (near Clock Tower / City Centre) – this Immigration Centre is not crowded at all compared to other Immigration offices in Dubai.
I paid a total of AED 1375 for the following:
  1. AED 250 (husband’s visa fee)
  2. AED 500 (fee for an in-country issuance of visa)
  3. AED 600 (fee for change of status, in-country)
  4. AED25 (Immigration processing fee)
I opted to pay the in-country issuance of visa instead of having to exit the country – the fee is actually cheaper (or just the same) if you compare to a return air ticket. * If the wife is not yet in the UAE, the fees will be less.
After that, my wife needs to take the medical test (within 2 months) to complete the residency and get her passport stamped.

Exclusive Invitation for Bloggers in the UAE from Google Arabia

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This must really be good. A great opportunity to mingle with fellow bloggers and a dialog with Google execs.  I’m thankful for the invitation.

Azkals to play 3 friendly matches in UAE

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I got a tweet:

The Philippines national football team, Azkals will be in UAE from February 5-17 for a training camp and a series of friendly matches.  This is a part of preparations for the upcoming Asian Football Confederation (AFC) Challenge Cup on March.

First of their 3 matches will be played on February 6 (7:30pm) in Abu Dhabi against the reigning Serbian SuperLiga champions Partizan Belgrade. The Azkals will also play matches in Dubai and possibly Sharjah.

Football is just gaining popularity in the Philippines and the surprising Azkals is one of the major reasons behind it, although they just rank 159 in FIFA world standings.  This is a great opportunity for the Filipino expats to see their national team up close. Tickets start at AED 50.

Here’s a highlight of Azkals vs. David Beckham and the LA Galaxy friendly match in Manila, to give you a preview:

Keep an eye on this post for updates on tickets, schedules and venues.

The Dubai Mall Metro Link Futuristic Bridge

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Artist impression of the glowy, futuristic link.

Emaar is set to develop an 820m-long glassy pedestrian bridge linking the metro station to Burj Khalifa and Dubai Mall.  The footbridge will be fully air-conditioned with extensive glazing overlooking the Downtown District. Its 10 travellators will start at the Burj Khalifa/The Dubai Mall Metro station entrance pod and travel through the Downtown Dubai development before connecting directly with The Dubai Mall. According to Emaar, The travellators can carry over 13,500 people per hour, moving at an average speed of 0.5 metres/second.

Another great idea to invite people to walk. Dubai Mall / Burj Khalifa is just about 5-10 minutes walk away from the metro station. If you take the feeder bus, it would actually take ages before you reach the mall due to bottleneck road congestion. This facility will be very beneficial especially during summer.  The bridge is scheduled to be operational in 2013.

Jason Mraz, James Blunt, James Morrison Headline 2012 Dubai Jazz Festival

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Dubai Festival City will serve as new home for the 10th edition of Skywards Dubai International Jazz Festival, which will see an outstanding line-up of legends, stars and divas including Jason Mraz, James Blunt and James Morrison, converge on a specially designed, acoustically enhanced venue from February 16th to February 24th 2012.

James Blunt, on February 16
Jason Mraz, on February 23
James Morrison, February 24

They are slated to perform from 10:30pm til 12 midnight. There are loads more great performers in the line up. Tickets are priced AED 295, 395, 595 and 995 respectively.

For more information and for tickets, visit Dubai Jazz Festival website.

Donate Relief Goods to Typhoon Victims in the Philippines

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dnata and Emirates Airlines are encouraging everyone in the UAE to contribute relief goods in food and toiletries to help the victims of typhoon Sendong in the Southern Philippines province of Cagayan De Oro (CDO).   Donation boxes are located in dnata and Emirates offices across Dubai. If you need assistance, you can contact 0503104958.

Donations are accepted until 17th January 2012.

“Also known as tropical storm Washi, Sendong triggered flash floods that left over 60,000 homeless and thousands still missing as the death toll nears 1,500.”

“Relief goods in the form of food must be limited to ready-to-eat or non-perishable items such as canned goods, instant noodles and biscuits. Toiletries include basic items such as bath soap, toothbrushes and toothpaste.
Contributions must be clearly labelled with the contents of each package. These will be separated into categories for easier dispatch to the Philippines.”

PBA 2012 Basketball Games in Dubai: Ginebra, Rain or Shine and Barako

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Photo by InterAKTV

Philippine Basketball Association will once again visit Dubai to bring its official games closer to overseas Filipino crowd. Hopefully, they already learned their lessons on who to partner with and avoid the same fate suffered by Talk ‘n Text in 2011. Ginebra for the 3rd straight time will be among the contingents, together with Barako Bull Energy and Rain or Shine Elastopainters.

Game schedules are:
February 23 – Rain or Shine vs. Barako Bull
February 24 – Rain or Shine vs Ginebra

Loads of reasons why every basketball fan should not miss this pair of exciting games.  Rain or Shine’s prized 2nd-overall pick and a strong contender for Rookie of the Year, Paul Lee is bringing his “Angas ng Tondo” wares along with the highly improving Jeff Chan, Gabe Norwood and Ronjay Buenafe. Barako Bull will have 2-time MVP Willie Miller, Danny Siegle and Don Allado among others.  They also have the surprising steal-of-the-draft rookie Dylan Ababou in its roster (if he won’t be traded). Dylan is a familiar face for the Dubai crowd as he has already played twice here for Smart Gilas during the Dubai Invitationals. Crowd-favorite Ginebra will be bannered by superstar veterans Mark Caguioa, Jayjay Helterbrand, Eric Menk and Mike Cortez among others.

Adding excitement are the taller imports. Ginebra is bringing back 7-foot-1 Chris Alexander who led the team to its last championship. Barako is looking to sign-up NBA veteran DerMarr Johnson to beef its front court. Rain or Shine, which is currently playing the the Philippine Cup Semifinals, still has to finalize their enforcement in the Fiesta Cup. Although rumors say that Adam Parada, coach Yeng Guiao’s import in Red Bull, will most likely be their import.

Tickets are priced as follows:
VIP – AED200
Ringside – AED150
Lower Box – AED100
Upper Box – AED 60

You can buy tickets in Dubai at Mediacom-Karama Branch (04-397 7272 / 050-2584829/050-9492680) Look for JR. In Abu Dhabi, Pisco (02-6416044) Look for Ms. Rose

Games will be played at Al Shabab Sports Club in Al Mamzar, Dubai. Gates open at 4:00 PM

The misuse and abuse of ‘Proud to be Pinoy’

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The Misuse of Pride


I bet it’s not only me who’s sick and tired and tired and sick of the widespread misuse and abuse of the”Proud to be Pinoy” comment.

Youtube, Facebook, and Twitter are popular playgrounds where some belt out this “pride.” In fact, we can be the world’s proudest netizens in social media today in the way we flood the comments sections. Charice, Arnel Pineda, Apl De Ap, and Manny Pacquiao are the ‘suki‘ of the infamous “Proud to be Pinoy” comments – whatever ‘Pinoy‘ we see in the international media, there is this pattern.

But something’s really really wrong. Posters may have the right intentions, but most of the “Proud to be Pinoy” comments were really out-of-place, out-of-context, and just about taking the ride and bragging without rights.

Others take that as ‘Nakikisakay na lang tayo sa kasikatan ng ating kababayan.’  It could just be a case of improper articulation or phonetics, but other nationalities find it offensive, so immature and irrelevant in fact.  It pisses them off whenever they see threads of “Proud to be Pinoy” comments… and it ignites an unnecessary racial battle. And why not? It’s about the talent, and not about being Pinoy. “Manhid?

In Tagalog, “Pinagmamalaki kong Pinoy ako dahil kay Manny, Charice etc…” Meh!

I understand we love to associate, we love to relate to any degree in fact. For every Filipino (pure or half, 1/4 or 1/8) who does great things and is globally recognized, we claim it, we’re part of it. We take pride. We even trace the path to prove one’s Filipino roots – whatever it takes. A trophy of one is a trophy of the nation.  That’s just right and so natural, but that could really go wrong too. We are “proud of our kabayan“.  Why don’t we simply say, “I’m proud of you Charice” or whoever, or “Great Job!”.

If Manny Pacquiao says “Proud to be Pinoy,” that’s perfect.  He is simply proud of what he can do being a Filipino. When Bruno Mars said he’s proud to be a Filipino, it sounds right. When Nicole Scherzinger says she’s proud of being Pinay, it sounds so sweet too.  Apl d Ap continues to write Tagalog in every Black Eyed Peas album and he consistently says he’s proud to be Pinoy. Right again. They have bragging rights!
But for us? The credit isn’t ours.  Let’s rather express appreciation. “We’re proud of you!” sounds way better.

Why are we so trigger-happy to comment “Proud to be Pinoy?” 

Maybe, being in a low to mid-class in the world, or being in a third-world country invites it. We have this mindset that the world looks at us as underdogs, thus whenever a Filipino becomes a world-class fame, we’re jumping into the ride. We want to prove something.  We want to change the impression of other nations about us. And so we shout “Proud to be Pinoy” when one Filipino shines bright.

Sadly, this shows we’re hungry for recognition attention.  We want to tell the world that we’ve also got what it takes to be on top.  Especially there are not much of Filipinos who are ‘big’ in the world.  So everyone’s a watchdog of who’ll make it big next… and will be proud of themselves again being a Filipino.

Media also play a big role in the demise of the real essence of Pinoy pride. Success, achievements, dreams have been bordered within the entertainment world only (well, the majority).  Media oftentimes leaves a mark that whatever the pop Westerners do, Pinoys can do as well – and that’s not one good yardstick to live by.

Wohooo! Proud to be Pinoy!” – so what are you proud of? Proud of another’s success is really okay, but is illogical and maligned. You should be proud because, you, being a Pinoy has great accomplishments. In the first place, nobody should be proud of himself, Pinoy or not, if he hasn’t done anything.

Instead of “Proud…” Say Mabuhay


We seem to forget what Filipinos shout whenever we win battles, whenever we’re rejoicing. We shout and chant “Mabuhay!” for our triumphant compatriot. Mabuhay is our signature greeting, chant, and battle cry. I know where this “Proud to be Pinoy” is coming from – we’re proud of what we have, we’re happy because our kababayan is a winner, is popular, etc. Then, why not simply say, “I’m proud of you, Mabuhay ang Pinoy!”

Use “Proud to be Pinoy” in its true essence.  Have reasons to support the pride. Being wowed by world-class Pinoy talents is an immature reason for being proud of yourself. Having heard the Philippines or Filipino in international media isn’t always a reason to exclaim pride. Imagine this… No Charice, No Manny Pacquiao, No Apl D Ap, or whose ever auntie-of-the-father-of-the-uncle’s-cousin is a Filipino. What will be your reasons… Why are you proud to be Pinoy?

MABUHAY ANG FILIPINO!