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Diana: what's up my super duper fabolous sexy macho, gradee 11

This is your girl, dianaa!! THIS IS TONIGHT WITH RT5!!!


*ishow na sa tv ang 'tonight with rt5'
*background music*
D: tonightt we have a very special guest!!
are u guys ready!
they are very known for their contribution to our literature
the very requested
let us all welcomeee! our very own Cirilo F. Bautista. A warm of applause please!!!
"/ ishow sa tv iyang nawng
*/ nisud na si Catacutan
*/ handshake with me
Diana: It is my pleasure to finally meet you sir!
*/ mo bow sa audience si catacutan
Diana: So sir, how's your life lately?
Catacutan: Well I was dead not until you woke me up so that you can interview me
here in your program, HAHAHAHHAHAHAHA.
Diana: Do you have any regrets sir?
Catacutan: A life lived and relived, then, emitting intensity and beauty only
achievable by a journey through pain.
Diana: uhm, sir we're going to talk about your early life
Catacutan: uhh.. “History is the other side of regret.”no just kidding
HAHAHHAAHAHAH
DIANA: Well considering how bright are you sir, we are curios at what instution did
u graduated from
Catacutan: I received my basic education from Legarda Elementary School i was 1st
Honorable Mention back then and went to Victorino Mapa High School and graduated
valedictorian. Well in college i got my degree in AB Literature from the
University of Santo Tomas , and MA Literature from St. Louis University, Baguio, i
also achieve the Doctor of Arts in Language and Literature from De La Salle
University-Manila.
Diana: wowwwwwwww, (ako nay bahala unsa akong isumpay)
we want to know more about you sir as a kid back the sir
CATACUTAN: I was born in Manila on July 9, 1941, and spent my childhood in Balic-
Balic, Sampaloc. Growing up in Balic-Balic, Sampaloc in Manila, I sold newspapers
and cleaned the soiled shoes of passersby to help my family earn extra income. My
father was a foreman in a cigarette factory, while my mother did domestic chores
for our neighbors.
Diana: Sir, what inspires you to become a writer?
Catacutan: “I became a writer because I took to heart my father’s advice to “shape
the past.” He did not tell me how, but I thought writing was the way to do it. He
did not tell me why, either, but I felt it was to gain some degree of happiness,
some ascendancy over the travails of existence…And a strong desire to make of the
past something beyond the past drove me into a fine madness and defined the borders
of my artistry. And so, every time I am asked when I decided to be a writer,
because, strangely enough, I did decide to be a writer—I answer, “When I first got
mad.” That moment, of course, was not accompanied by a roar of thunder and a blaze
of lightning; like all life-altering decisions, it developed quietly and gradually
until, many years later, I found that I was irrevocably engaged in the fashioning
of prose and poetry. I discovered that writing was the most effective way of
configurating the elements of reality into an ever-fresh world and that literature
was the only possible, faithful, and unassailable reconstruction of human values in
a gaudy and duplicitous environment.”
Diana: What an (oks na bahala)
tonight let us all welcome another writer who shed light to our literature
MR. F. Sionel Jose! applause
*/ pic ni jose
Diana: What was your life before you became a writer?
Nicole: I was born in Rosales, Pangasinan in 1924. I had to work as a labourer to
support my family when I young but I studied at the University of Santo Tomás and
then took some pre-med courses, before starting my career as a journalist.

Fast talk with Diana with a twist given 1 min


(He was an exchange professor in Waseda University and Ohio University. He became
an Honorary Fellow in Creative Writing at the University of Iowa in 1969, and was
the first recipient of a British Council fellowship as a creative writer at Trinity
College, Cambridge in 1987.)

(José received Carlos Palanca Memorial Awards for “The God Stealer” (short fiction,
1959), “Waywaya” (short fiction, 1979), “Arbol de Fuego” (short fiction, 1980),
“Tree” (novel, 1978), and “A Scenario for Philippine Resistance,” (essay,1979).)

Diana: HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAH (chu chu)


Diana: basat iintroduce nako nga naay ganahan maka meet nila
Fan 1: chu chu
moving on/
fan 2: chu chu
after kay presentation sa ilang mga contribution

then the end.

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