OJT-ING WITH A HEADLESS GRADUATE
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I hate it when my post is published on a wrong date. All my posts in my previous blog are projected to have been uploaded a day before. Do I really have to change post dates each and every time? >:-(
And ugh. I had a lot of typos. Braargh. Why does this keyboard can’t comply with my brain? Or I really have a problem with impromptu typing?

On-The-(blow)Job training, that is.
Probably a few know (not anymore) that I am having my internship somewhere in Makati. That I can define how my ojt feels like–air-conditioning, office tables, cabinets, computers, and a lot of talking and walking and traveling and mating–I mean meeting.. Plus the ups and downs inside elevators, and oh my GOD–the heavily crowded human traffic inside the Ayala station during those unholiest ‘uwian’ (homecoming) hours.
Torrentationing
There are no pirated “An Inconvenient Truth” and “Imelda” DVDs available along the bangketa republique in Dasmariñas, Cavite. And since I have a perfectly speedy broadband connection, I ‘torrent’ed these award-winning documentaries and had my eyes feasted on it for 6 hours.

“An Inconvenient Truth” tackles about the struggles of Al Gore’s politics treatment in worldwide awareness of global warming and how alarming it is that people, in his scientific assertion, has greatly influenced the drastic increase of accumulated greenhouse gases, particularly carbon dioxide, in the atmosphere (andropogenic greenhouse gases). It is so perturbing (the greenhouse gases, not Al Gore’s storytelling of his son’s car accident and cattle) that I recommend you guys to watch it and argue with the bums of those who believe that the cosmic rays, not the increasing CO2 emission of fossil fuel burning and vehicles and over-population, are the real culprits of global warming, and that we should take Al Gore for granted.

On the other hand, “Imelda” is a documentary about the previous prestigious political and fashion world regime of Imelda Marcos during the incumbency of her less popular husband, Ferdinand Marcos. Very entertaining, very captivating, very educational, I recommend it for those who want to realize that once in our lifetime the Philippines was placed ‘under bright Tungsten lights’ on the world map–all because of Imelda and her republic and international charm–before.
