TopGear - August 2015 PH

(National Geographic (Little) Kids) #1

REVOLUTION


here was the Japanese


occupation, and next, the


British invasion.


But while blood was


senselessly spilled in the years


that the horrific Japanese occupation was


sowing indescribable terror on us, ending only


in 1945 when Emperor Hirohito’s Imperial


Army surrendered in the face of imminent


defeat at the combined forces of Filipino and


American contingents, it was all peace during


the British invasion, which ended on July 6 ,


1966 , in Manila.


And while the Japanese occupation was


all about guns, cannons, bayonets and Tora!


Tora! Tora! planes on kamikaze missions, the


British invasion was all about music, long hair


and, well, some chasing on foot at the Manila


International Airport. Thousands of Filipinos


lost their lives in defense of freedom and


democracy against the conquering Japanese.


Not a single life was snuffed out in an absolute


homage by the Filipinos to the British.


The Japanese occupation saw the coming


of the Willys jeep, that vehicle brought here in


huge numbers by the Americans for use in their


anti-Japanese operations. After World War II,


with America helping us decisively demolish


Japan, those jeeps left behind by the Yanks


were, by dint of Filipino ingenuity, converted


into public conveyances, mainly in place of the


slow-moving calesa.


It is now called the jeepney, aka the king of


the road. King because it moves imperiously


around, unmindful of basic traffic laws and


regulations to the chagrin, if not constant


frustration, of law-abiding citizens hankering


over the need for authorities to use strong-arm


tactics to force jeepney drivers to observe road


courtesies.


If only the Yanks had known the Willys jeeps


would retrogress, degenerate, into this, they


might have thought twice before leaving the


vehicles behind here.


Me? I’ve learned to live with it through an


impregnable patience inspired by Mahatma


Gandhi’s pacifist philosophy. Also, I have


buttressed my anger management with an


ice-cool resolve to offer a blind eye each time a


hint of mind-messing instance could even start


haranguing me. So, when a jeepney in front of


me decides to stop to either load or unload a


passenger, fine. Same goes for a cab or a bus.


Immediately, I step on the brake, gently,


then steer either left or right and proceed


quietly like a river that runs deep, as though


I’ve seen nothing happening. In short, you will


never see me raise hell, nor hear me cuss or


curse like Michael Douglas in that classic film


about breaking down, about burnout. I have


stuck to my ABCs of driving all this time: A for


avoiding a vehicle suddenly stopping in front of


me, B for braking and not blowing my horn to


shoo away a vehicle blocking my path, and C for


controlling my temper. Always, a problem is a


reason to make me a better person.


But enough of that. Back to the British


invasion now.


Yes, you guessed it right: The British


invasion here refers to the coming of The


Beatles to the Philippines in July 1966.


Although they performed in Manila for only


one night, it was a watershed in the country’s


musical history.


But the first British invasion referring to


The Beatles was when they flew to the US in


February 1964. A month before their arrival


in New York, their song ‘I Want To Hold Your


Hand’ sold 1. 5 million copies in the US in


under three weeks. Preceding their first US


concert was the distribution of five million


posters across America, triggering the defining


moment of Beatles history in Yankee country,


and spawning the term ‘British invasion’ that


became viral worldwide.


For the record, I am a certified Beatlemaniac


like Lexus Manila president Danny ‘Sir John’


Isla, Toyota Motor Corporation hotshot Vince


Socco, and Top Gear chief Vernon B. Sarne.


Of the four Beatles, Ringo Starr owned a


Mini, and John Lennon owned a Beetle. Now


this: I know that, maybe, you must have known


already—especially the TG faithful—that my


first car was a Mini. Though already rickety


because it was a battered secondhand unit, it


heroically brought me to Baguio and faraway


Calauag, Quezon, several times. Gosh, I just


loved my Mini.


When I bought my Beetle, colored Shantung


yellow, to become my first brand-new car years


later, my wife’s friend begged me to sell her my


Mini. When my wife learned about it, she sold it


for P 4 , 000. Tell me, when did you ever say no to


your wife?


Was I fated to own a Mini and a Beetle just


because I am a Beatlemaniac? Maybe. Our stars


love to play tricks on us, you know.


The Beatles performed on July 4 , 1966 , at the


Rizal Memorial Football Stadium, with Pilita


Corrales and Reycard Duet as front acts, among


others. Then, when The Beatles snubbed an


‘inserted’ dinner date with the Marcos family


the following day, they were shabbily treated


and left to fend for themselves at the airport,


where some Marcos fanatics—as the myth


goes—chased the quartet in a bid to spray lice


on the fabled mop-topped quartet.


In my years of investigative reporting, none


of that had happened.


Anyway, in their British invasion of Manila,


The Beatles sang ‘Rain,’ ‘If I Needed Someone’


and ‘I Feel Fine.’ I was there. I heard nothing but


noise. But still, it felt fine. Or, I felt fine.


AL MENDOZA


Brit invasion


years ago, we were conquered. it


only took a one-night concert by


the charming boys from liverpool


t


Car CULtUrE


‘was i fatEd to own


a mini and a BEEtLE


jUst BECaUsE i am


a BEatLEmaniaC?’


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