#Dr. Roy Guerrero
The pediatrician who treated juvenile gunshot victims after the elementary school mass shooting in Uvalde, Texas, castigated Congress for allowing teenagers to buy guns.
During testimony on Wednesday as lawmakers consider new legislation on gun violence, Dr. Roy Guerrero described treating children who’d been shot by an 18-year-old gunman and seeing the decapitated bodies of children who had been torn apart by bullets from an assault rifle.
Guerrero said he became a pediatrician partly because children are good patients who listen to medical advice, whereas adults are stubborn to change even if it will make them better.
“Why else would there have been such little progress made in Congress to stop gun violence? Innocent children all over the country today are dead because laws and policy allows people to buy weapons before they’re legally even old enough to buy a pack of beer,” Guerrero said.
“They are dead because restrictions have been allowed to lapse,” Guerrero said, referring to the assault weapons ban that expired in 2004. “They’re dead because there are no rules about where guns are kept. Because no one is paying attention to who is buying them.”
The Uvalde gunman murdered 19 elementary school students and two teachers using an assault rifle he legally purchased days after his 18th birthday. Federal law allows 18-year-olds to purchase shotguns and rifles from licensed gun dealers while restricting handgun sales to people 21 and older.
House Democrats plan to vote on a package of gun legislation later Wednesday that would include a bill raising the minimum age for most shotguns and rifles, but the bills won’t clear the Senate.
A bipartisan group of Senators, however, is negotiating on a more modest package of reforms that could include improvements to the background check system for licensed gun sales, funding for mental health and incentives for states to pass “red flag” laws to confiscate guns from people who are deemed dangerous.
Senate Democrats have pushed for raising the age for assault rifles to 21, but Sen. Chris Murphy (D-Conn.) told HuffPost on Tuesday that Republicans would probably tank the whole package if it raised the age.
Guerrero said the AR-style rifle used in Uvalde left the killer’s victims unrecognizable.
“Two children, whose bodies had been so pulverized by the bullets fired at them, over and over again, whose flesh had been so ripped apart, that the only clue as to their identities were the blood spattered cartoon clothes still clinging to them,” Guerrero said.
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4th graders decapitated by AR-15 bullets. Bodies identified by DNA because they were pulverized to the point of being unrecognizable.
😢
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Dr. Roy Guerrero, a pediatrician in Texas, testified during Wednesday's hearing and recounted a horrifying and disturbing scene he saw at Uvalde Memorial Hospital on the day of the mass shooting.
Guerrero — who said he's lived in Uvalde his whole life and treated children in the community before the massacre — said that he "raced" to Uvalde Memorial Hospital on the day of the mass shooting.
Read his full remarks here:
"My name is Dr. Roy Guerrero. I am a board certified pediatrician and I was present at Uvalde Memorial Hospital the day of the massacre on May 24th, 2022 at Robb Elementary School. I was called here today as a witness. But I showed up because I am a doctor. Because how many years ago I swore an oath — An oath to do no harm.
After witnessing first hand the carnage in my hometown of Uvalde, to stay silent would have betrayed that oath. Inaction is harm. Passivity is harm. Delay is harm. So here I am. Not to plead, not to beg or to convince you of anything. But to do my job. And hope that by doing so it inspires the members of this House to do theirs.
I have lived in Uvalde my whole life. In fact, I attended Robb Elementary School myself as a kid. As often is the case with us grown ups, we remember a lot of the good and not so much of the bad. So I don’t recall homework or spelling bees, I remember how much I loved going to school and what a joyful time it was.
Back then we were able to run between classrooms with ease to visit our friends. And I remember the way the cafeteria smelled lunchtime on Hamburger Thursdays.
It was right around lunchtime on a Tuesday that a gunman entered the school through the main door without restriction, massacred 19 students and two teachers and changed the way every student at Robb and their families will remember that school, forever.
I doubt they’ll remember the smell of the cafeteria or the laughter ringing in the hallways. Instead they’ll be haunted by the memory of screams and bloodshed, panic and chaos. Police shouting, parents wailing. I know I will never forget what I saw that day.
For me, that day started like any typical Tuesday at our Pediatric clinic - moms calling for coughs, boogers, sports physicals – right before the summer rush. School was out in two days then summer camps would guarantee some grazes and ankle sprains. Injuries that could be patched up and fixed with a Mickey Mouse sticker as a reward.
Then at 12:30 business as usual stopped and with it my heart. A colleague from a San Antonio trauma center texted me a message: 'Why are the pediatric surgeons and anesthesiologists on call for a mass shooting in Uvalde?'
I raced to the hospital to find parents outside yelling children’s names in desperation and sobbing as they begged for any news related to their child. Those mother’s cries I will never get out of my head.
As I entered the chaos of the ER, the first casualty I came across was Miah Cerrillo. She was sitting in the hallway. Her face was still, still clearly in shock, but her whole body was shaking from the adrenaline coursing through it. The white Lilo and Stitch shirt she wore was covered in blood and her shoulder was bleeding from a shrapnel injury.
Sweet Miah. I’ve known her my whole life. As a baby she survived major liver surgeries against all odds. And once again she’s here. As a survivor. Inspiring us with her story today and her bravery.
When I saw Miah sitting there, I remembered having seen her parents outside. So after quickly examining two other patients of mine in the hallway with minor injuries, I raced outside to let them know Miah was alive. I wasn’t ready for their next urgent and desperate question: 'Where's Elena?'
Elena, is Miah’s 8-year-old sister who was also at Robb at the time of the shooting. I had heard from some nurses that there were “two dead children” who had been moved to the surgical area of the hospital. As I made my way there, I prayed that I wouldn’t find her.
I didn’t find Elena, but what I did find was something no prayer will ever relieve.
Two children, whose bodies had been so pulverized by the bullets fired at them, decapitated, whose flesh had been so ripped apart, that the only clue as to their identities was the blood spattered cartoon clothes still clinging to them. Clinging for life and finding none.
I could only hope these two bodies were a tragic exception to the list of survivors. But as I waited there with my fellow Uvalde doctors, nurses, first responders and hospital staff for other casualties we hoped to save, they never arrived. All that remained was the bodies of 17 more children and the two teachers who cared for them, who dedicated their careers to nurturing and respecting the awesome potential of every single one. Just as we doctors do.
I’ll tell you why I became a pediatrician. Because I knew that children were the best patients. They accept the situation as it’s explained to them. You don’t have to coax them into changing their lifestyles in order to get better or
plead them to modify their behavior as you do with adults.
No matter how hard you try to help an adult, their path to healing is always determined by how willing they are to take action. Adults are stubborn. We’re resistant to change even when the change will make things better for ourselves. But especially when we think we’re immune to the fallout.
Why else would there have been such little progress made in Congress to stop gun violence?
Innocent children all over the country today are dead because laws and policy allows people to buy weapons before they’re legally even old enough to buy a pack of beer. They are dead because restrictions have been allowed to lapse. They’re dead because there are no rules about where guns are kept. Because no one is paying attention to who is buying them.
The thing I can’t figure out is whether our politicians are failing us out of stubbornness, passivity or both.
I said before that as grown ups we have a convenient habit of remembering the good and forgetting the bad. Never more so than when it comes to our guns. Once the blood is rinsed away from the bodies of our loved ones, and scrubbed off the floors or the schools and supermarkets and churches, the carnage from each scene is erased from our collective conscience and we return once again to nostalgia.
To the rose tinted view of our second amendment as a perfect instrument of American life, no matter how many lives are lost.
I chose to be a pediatrician. I chose to take care of children. Keeping them safe from preventable diseases I can do. Keeping them safe from bacteria and brittle bones I can do. But making sure our children are safe from guns, that’s the job of our politicians and leaders.
In this case, you are the doctors and our country is the patient. We are lying on the operating table, riddled with bullets like the children of Robb Elementary and so many other schools. We are bleeding out and you are not there.
My oath as a doctor means that I signed up to save lives. I do my job. And I guess it turns out that I am here to plead. To beg. To please, please do yours."
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The children’s bodies were “pulverized,” “decapitated” and “ripped apart.”
Cerrillo added that she did not feel safe in school and did not “want it to happen again.” Her pediatrician, Dr. Roy Guerrero, asked her questions off-camera, including if she thought a shooting like this will happen again and Cerrillo affirmatively nodded.
Cerrillo was calm and quiet. She didn’t cry. But some of the adults from Uvalde who testified wept before the committee, including her father, Miguel Cerrillo, who traveled to Washington to testify in person.
“I come because I could have lost my baby girl, but she’s not the same baby girl I used to play with,” he said, adding that “schools are not safe anymore.”
Miah is a brave girl and it is heartbreaking that she had to go through that.
As for the children who lost their lives we are finally being told how gruesome these shootings are.
But [Guerrero] also described his encounter with the bodies of two deceased children that arrived at his hospital.
The children’s bodies were “pulverized,” “decapitated” and “ripped apart.” The bullets did so much damage to their bodies that the “only clue as to their identities was a blood-splattered cartoon clothes still clinging to them, clinging for life and finding none.”
These are children and its so fucking heartbreaking. Its not ok.
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Uvalde pediatrician testified today.
"My name is Dr. Roy Guerrero. I am a board certified pediatrician and I was present at Uvalde Memorial Hospital the day of the massacre on May 24th, 2022 at Robb Elementary School. I was called here today as a witness. But I showed up because I am a doctor. Because how many years ago I swore an oath — An oath to do no harm.
After witnessing first hand the carnage in my hometown of Uvalde, to stay silent would have betrayed that oath. Inaction is harm. Passivity is harm. Delay is harm. So here I am. Not to plead, not to beg or to convince you of anything. But to do my job. And hope that by doing so it inspires the members of this House to do theirs.
I have lived in Uvalde my whole life. In fact, I attended Robb Elementary School myself as a kid. As often is the case with us grown ups, we remember a lot of the good and not so much of the bad. So I don’t recall homework or spelling bees, I remember how much I loved going to school and what a joyful time it was.
Back then we were able to run between classrooms with ease to visit our friends. And I remember the way the cafeteria smelled lunchtime on Hamburger Thursdays.
It was right around lunchtime on a Tuesday that a gunman entered the school through the main door without restriction, massacred 19 students and two teachers and changed the way every student at Robb and their families will remember that school, forever.
I doubt they’ll remember the smell of the cafeteria or the laughter ringing in the hallways. Instead they’ll be haunted by the memory of screams and bloodshed, panic and chaos. Police shouting, parents wailing. I know I will never forget what I saw that day.
For me, that day started like any typical Tuesday at our Pediatric clinic - moms calling for coughs, boogers, sports physicals – right before the summer rush. School was out in two days then summer camps would guarantee some grazes and ankle sprains. Injuries that could be patched up and fixed with a Mickey Mouse sticker as a reward.
Then at 12:30 business as usual stopped and with it my heart. A colleague from a San Antonio trauma center texted me a message: 'Why are the pediatric surgeons and anesthesiologists on call for a mass shooting in Uvalde?'
I raced to the hospital to find parents outside yelling children’s names in desperation and sobbing as they begged for any news related to their child. Those mother’s cries I will never get out of my head.
As I entered the chaos of the ER, the first casualty I came across was Miah Cerrillo. She was sitting in the hallway. Her face was still, still clearly in shock, but her whole body was shaking from the adrenaline coursing through it. The white Lilo and Stitch shirt she wore was covered in blood and her shoulder was bleeding from a shrapnel injury.
Sweet Miah. I’ve known her my whole life. As a baby she survived major liver surgeries against all odds. And once again she’s here. As a survivor. Inspiring us with her story today and her bravery.
When I saw Miah sitting there, I remembered having seen her parents outside. So after quickly examining two other patients of mine in the hallway with minor injuries, I raced outside to let them know Miah was alive. I wasn’t ready for their next urgent and desperate question: 'Where's Elena?'
Elena, is Miah’s 8-year-old sister who was also at Robb at the time of the shooting. I had heard from some nurses that there were “two dead children” who had been moved to the surgical area of the hospital. As I made my way there, I prayed that I wouldn’t find her.
I didn’t find Elena, but what I did find was something no prayer will ever relieve.
Two children, whose bodies had been so pulverized by the bullets fired at them, decapitated, whose flesh had been so ripped apart, that the only clue as to their identities was the blood spattered cartoon clothes still clinging to them. Clinging for life and finding none.
I could only hope these two bodies were a tragic exception to the list of survivors. But as I waited there with my fellow Uvalde doctors, nurses, first responders and hospital staff for other casualties we hoped to save, they never arrived. All that remained was the bodies of 17 more children and the two teachers who cared for them, who dedicated their careers to nurturing and respecting the awesome potential of every single one. Just as we doctors do.
I’ll tell you why I became a pediatrician. Because I knew that children were the best patients. They accept the situation as it’s explained to them. You don’t have to coax them into changing their lifestyles in order to get better or plead them to modify their behavior as you do with adults.
No matter how hard you try to help an adult, their path to healing is always determined by how willing they are to take action. Adults are stubborn. We’re resistant to change even when the change will make things better for ourselves. But especially when we think we’re immune to the fallout.
Why else would there have been such little progress made in Congress to stop gun violence?
Innocent children all over the country today are dead because laws and policy allows people to buy weapons before they’re legally even old enough to buy a pack of beer. They are dead because restrictions have been allowed to lapse. They’re dead because there are no rules about where guns are kept. Because no one is paying attention to who is buying them.
The thing I can’t figure out is whether our politicians are failing us out of stubbornness, passivity or both.
I said before that as grown ups we have a convenient habit of remembering the good and forgetting the bad. Never more so than when it comes to our guns. Once the blood is rinsed away from the bodies of our loved ones, and scrubbed off the floors or the schools and supermarkets and churches, the carnage from each scene is erased from our collective conscience and we return once again to nostalgia.
To the rose tinted view of our second amendment as a perfect instrument of American life, no matter how many lives are lost.
I chose to be a pediatrician. I chose to take care of children. Keeping them safe from preventable diseases I can do. Keeping them safe from bacteria and brittle bones I can do. But making sure our children are safe from guns, that’s the job of our politicians and leaders.
In this case, you are the doctors and our country is the patient. We are lying on the operating table, riddled with bullets like the children of Robb Elementary and so many other schools. We are bleeding out and you are not there.
My oath as a doctor means that I signed up to save lives. I do my job. And I guess it turns out that I am here to plead. To beg. To please, please do yours."
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DCEU Recast
For fun I’ve decided to do a recast of the DCEU and ps in my version everyone gets their movie before Justice League and it’s Martian Manhunter who brings everyone together
My other DC Fancasts
Batman
Batman Beyond
Superman
Wonder Woman
The Flash
Aquaman
Green Lantern
Green Arrow
Justice League
Teen Titans
Justice League Dark
The Dark Knight Returns
Telltale’s Batman
Injustice
Legion Of Doom
Birds Of Prey
Phase 1
Man Of Steel
Josh Hartnett as Superman/Clark Kent
Emily Blunt as Lois Lane
Harrison Ford as Jonathan Kent
Meryl Streep as Martha Kent
Kate Mara as Lana Lang
Tobey Maguire as Pete Ross
Sean Bean as Jor-El
Kate Winslett as Lara Lor-Van
Rupert Grint as Jimmy Olsen
William Shatner as Perry White
Rachel McAdams as Cat Grant
Patrick Warburton as Steve Lombard
Sterling K Brown as Ron Troupe
Billie Piper as Maggie Sawyer
Christopher Meloni as Dan Turpin
Danny Glover as William Henderson
Richard Schiff as Dr Emil Hamilton
Clancy Brown as General Sam Lane
Terry O’Quinn as Lex Luthor
Tao Okamoto as Mercy Graves
Viggo Mortensen as General Zod
Lena Headley as Faora
Robert Maillet as Non
The Batman(in my version, The Batman comes after Man Of Steel, this will be about how The Joker and Harley Quinn kills Jason Todd, yes both Joker and Harley kill Jason. It’s important that everyone realizes Harley is a villain and not a anti-hero)
Karl Urban as Batman/Bruce Wayne
Peter Capaldi as Alfred Pennyworth
Michael Keaton as Thomas Wayne
Kim Basinger as Martha Wayne
Courtney B Vance as Lucius Fox
Kate Mulgrew as Dr Leslie Thompkins
Diane Kruger as Vicki Vale
Mark Pellegrino as Jack Ryder/The Creeper
Jesús Castro as Nightwing/Dick Grayson
Jane Levy as Barbara Gordon/Oracle
Matthew Daddario as Jason Todd/Robin
Morena Baccarin as Catwoman/Selina Kyle
or Odette Annable as Catwoman/Selina Kyle
or Eiza González as Catwoman/Selina Kyle
Bryan Cranston as James Gordon
Michael Madsen as Harvey Bullock
Stephanie Beatriz as Renee Montoya
Jodie Foster as Sarah Essen
Ben Mendelsohn as Dr Jeremiah Arkham
Rockmond Dunbar as Aaron Cash
Joe Giligun as The Joker
Amanda Seyfried as Harley Quinn
And on the Batcomputer we’d see cameos from the other Batman villains
Alfred Molina as The Penguin/Oswald Chesterfield Cobblepot
Liev Schreiber as Two-Face/Harvey Dent
David Tennant as The Riddler
Tobin Bell as Mr Freeze/Victor Fries
Jessica Chastain as Poison Ivy/Pamela Isley
Michael Wincott as Black Mask/Roman Sionis
Adam Driver as Scarecrow/Jonathan Crane
Ben Kingsley as Hugo Strange
Toby Jones as Mad Hatter/Jervis Tetch
Majid Al Masri as Ra’s Al Ghul
Shanina Shaik as Talia Al Ghul
Yasmine Al Massri as Nyssa Raatko
Zhang Ziyi as Lady Shiva
John Lithgow as Arnold Wesker/The Ventriloquist
Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje as Killer Croc/Waylon Jones
Pedro Pascal as Deadshot/Floyd Lawton
Kevin Durand as Solomon Grundy
Jackie Earle Haley as Victor Zsasz
Leonardo DiCaprio as Clayface/Basil Karlo
Woody Harrelson as Firefly/Garfield Lynns
Doug Jones as Man-Bat /Dr. Kirk Langstrom
Daniel Radcliffe as Anarky
Conleth Hill as Calandar Man/Julian Day
Tom Berenger as Commissioner Gillian B. Loeb
Michael Weatherly as Detective Arnold Flass
Will Arnett as Lt. Howard Branden
Robert DeNiro as Carmine Falcone
Al Pacino as Salvatore Maroni
Charlie Heaton as Alberto Falcone
Gwendoline Christie as Sofia Falcone
Vincent Karthieser as Mario Falcone
Nick Nolte as Rupert Thorne
Brad Dourif as Joe Chill
World’s Finest(This is not BVS this is World’s Finest. This is not a dumbed down fight scene just to kiss Frank Miller’s ass to adapt the most overrated comic. I care more about Batman and Superman having strong differences and overcoming them and working together in the end to stop a common threat. They are called the World’s Finest for a reason.)
Karl Urban as Batman/Bruce Wayne
Josh Hartnett as Superman/Clark Kent
Emily Blunt as Lois Lane
Peter Capaldi as Alfred Pennyworth
Bryan Cranston as James Gordon
Michael Madsen as Harvey Bullock
Stephanie Beatriz as Renee Montoya
Rupert Grint as Jimmy Olsen
William Shatner as Perry White
Billie Piper as Maggie Sawyer
Christopher Meloni as Dan Turpin
Joe Gilgun as The Joker
Amanda Seyfried as Harley Quinn
Terry O’Quinn as Lex Luther
Tao Okamoto as Mercy Graves
Wonder Woman
Gemma Arterton as Wonder Woman/Diana Prince
Ryan Gosling as Steve Trevor
Lucy Davis as Etta Candy
Lynda Carter as Hippolyta
Alexandra Daddario as Artemis
Lisa Berry as General Philippus
Robin Wright as General Antiope
Gerard Butler as Ares
Anne Hathaway as Athena
Lucy Lawless as Hera
Liam Neeson as Zeus
Peter Stormare as Hades
Green Lantern(Basically what the animated movie First Flight was. But Buddy Cop adventures of Hal and Sinestro. Hal Jordan mentoring under Sinestro (who does NOT turn evil at the end of the first, but instead the end of the second movie and in the third movie is when we get Sinestro Corps, however my big change to Sinestro’s character is Sinestro isn't a tyrant of his own people. Have it be that Sinestro used the ring to better his own world and his people love him, but the Guardians saw that as interference and marked Sinestro as a threat)
Chris Pine as Green Lantern/Hal Jordan
Lauren Cohan as Carol Ferris
Luke Evans as Sinestro
Zachary Quinto as Tomar-Re
Ken Watanabe as Abin Sur
Scott Bakula as Alan Scott
Ron Pearlman as Kilowog
Michael Sheen as Hector Hammond
With cameos from future Green Lanterns
Trevante Rhodes as John Stewart/Green Lantern
Diego Luna as Kyle Rayner
Aaron Paul as Guy Gardner
Saad Siddiqui as Simon Baz
Dianne Guerrero as Jessica Cruz
The Flash
Garrett Hedlund as The Flash/Barry Allen
Anna Kendrick as Iris West
David Duchovny as Henry Allen
Gillian Anderson as Nora Allen
Sendhil Ramamurthy as David Singh
Lennie James as James Forrest
Peter Weller as Darryl Frye
Juno Temple as Patty Spivot
Tiffany Espensen as Linda Park
Bruce Greenwood as Jay Garrick
Peyton Meyer as Wally West/Kid Flash
Michael C Hall as Eobard Thawne/Reverse Flash
Aquaman
Alexander Skarsgard as Aquaman/Arthur Curry
Christina Hendricks as Mera
Stellan Skarsgård as Tom Curry
Kelsey Grammer as Nuidis Vulko
Cary-Hiroyuki Tagawa as Dr. Stephen Shin
Nicole Kidman as Atlanna
Michael K Williams as Black Manta
Gustaf Skarsgard as Ocean Master
Teen Titans(I think it’s better to have Teen Titans instead of Suicide Squad in phase 1)
Jesús Castro as Nightwing/Dick Grayson
Ray Fisher as Cyborg/Victor Stone
Sharon Belle as Starfire/ Koriand'r
Natasha Negovanlis as Raven/Rachel Roth
Dylan O'Brien as Beast Boy/Garfield Logan
Peyton List as Terra
Joe Manganiello as Deathstroke/Slade Wilson
Justice League(White Martians will be the villains and J’onn is the one who unites the Justice League)
Karl Urban as Batman/Bruce Wayne
Josh Hartnett as Superman/Clark Kent
Gemma Areton as Wonder Woman/Diana Prince
Garrett Hedlund as The Flash/Barry Allen
Alexander Skarsgard as Aquaman/Arthur Curry
Chris Pine as Green Lantern/Hal Jordan
Giancarlo Esposito as J’onn J’onzz/Martian Manhunter
Phase 2
Man Of Steel 2
Josh Hartnett as Superman/Clark Kent
Emily Blunt as Lois Lane
Elle Fanning as Supergirl/Kara Zor-El
Meryl Streep as Martha Kent
Rupert Grint as Jimmy Olsen
William Shatner as Perry White
Rachel McAdams as Cat Grant
Patrick Warburton as Steve Lombard
Warner Miller as Ron Troupe
Billie Piper as Maggie Sawyer
Robert De Niro as Dan Turpin
Mark Harmon as William Henderson
Richard Schiff as Dr Emil Hamilton
Clancy Brown as General Sam Lane
Terry O’Quinn as Lex Luthor
Ralph Fiennes as Brainiac
Shazam(In title name and Billy shouting only, the choice to call Billy’s hero persona Shazam is a confusing mess)
Channing Tatum as Captain Marvel
Noah Schnapp as Billy Batson
Finn Wolfhard as Freddy Freeman
Rowan Blanchard as Mary Batson
Jim Beaver as Uncle Dudley
Ernie Hudson as Jebidiah of Canaan/The Wizard of Shazam
Jeffrey Wright as Tawky Tawny
Hugh Laurie as Dr. Thaddeus Sivana
Dwayne Johnson as Black Adam
Suicide Squad
Mo´Nique as Amanda Waller
Daniel Craig as Colonel Rick Flag
Pedro Pascal as Deadshot/Floyd Lawton
Jonny Lee Miller as Captain Boomerang
Kristen Bell as Killer Frost
Derek Mears as King Shark
Michael Jai White as Bronze Tiger
Karen Fukuhara as Katana
Holland Roden as Plastique
Wonder Woman 2
Gemma Areton as Wonder Woman/Diana Prince
Ryan Gosling as Steve Trevor
Lynda Carter as Hippolyta
Alexandra Daddario as Artemis
Lisa Berry as General Philippus
Angelina Jolie as Circe
Charlize Theron as Cheetah
Green Arrow
Charlie Hunam as Green Arrow/Oliver Queen
Katheryn Winnick as Black Canary/Dinah Lance
Taron Egerton as Arsenal/Roy Harper
Alona Tal as Speedy/Mia Dearden
Common as John Diggle
Josh Gad as Henry Fyff
Donnie Yen as Yao Fei
Devon Aoki as Shado
Keanu Reeves as Merlyn
Bird Of Prey
Jane Levy as Barbara Gordon/Oracle
Teresa Ting as Batgirl/Cassandra Cain
Katheryn Winnick as Black Canary/Dinah Lance
Eliza Dushku as Helena Bertinelli/The Huntress
Tatiana Maslany as Lady Blackhawk/Zinda Blake
Gugu Mbatha-Raw as Vixen/Mari Jiwe McCabe
Lily Collins as Starling/Evelyn Crawford
Zhang Ziyi as Lady Shiva
Batman Under The Red Hood
Karl Urban as Batman/Bruce Wayne
Peter Capaldi as Alfred Pennyworth
Matthew Daddario as Red Hood/Jason Todd
Bryan Cranston as James Gordon
Michael Madsen as Harvey Bullock
Stephanie Beatriz as Renee Montoya
Michael Wincott as Black Mask/Roman Sionis
Joe Giligun as The Joker
Amanda Seyfried as Harley Quinn
Shanina Shaik as Talia Al Ghul
Justice League:Legion Of Doom
Karl Urban as Batman/Bruce Wayne
Josh Hartnett as Superman/Clark Kent
Gemma Areton as Wonder Woman/Diana Prince
Garrett Hedlund as The Flash/Barry Allen
Alexander Skarsgard as Aquaman/Arthur Curry
Chris Pine as Green Lantern/Hal Jordan
Giancarlo Esposito as J’onn J’onzz/Martian Manhunter
Terry O’Quinn as Lex Luthor
Joe Gilgun as The Joker
Joe Manganiello as Deathstroke
Michael K Williams as Black Manta
Charlize Theron as Cheetah
Dwayne Johnson as Black Adam
Luke Evans as Sinestro
Michael C Hall as Reverse Flash/ Eobard Thawne
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Reviews 205: La llama de Prometeo
Discómanos is a record label and collective of artists operating out of Spain and last year they released a beautiful compilation entitled La llama de Prometeo: La puerta de entrada a las Nueves Músicas Españolas. The title translates to “The Flame of Prometheus: The Gateway to the New Spanish Music” and indeed, this collection serves as an adventurous and breathtakingly gorgeous survey of Spain’s space music, new age, and ambient scenes during the late 80s and 90s, with many of the artists here having been associated to Hyades Arts, Grabaciones Accidentales, and Música Sin-Fin. I have to thank Ban Ban Ton Ton for turning me onto this one, for if Dr. Rob hadn’t mentioned the release when writing about his Chilled / January 2019 mix, I might never have come across it. Which is altogether surprising given my fascination with this corner of Spain’s rich musical history as well as the fact the big names such as Finis Africae, Iury Lech, and Suso Saiz all appear. But there are many wonderful artists that are completely new to me as well and in every case, compiler Daniel Nielles has selected tracks that have never before been released on vinyl. The music itself is dreamy and meditative, seeing soundworlds of seaside folk, pastoral new age, heart-melting ambient, and bleary-eyed kosmische all unite for a balearic float on waves made of light. And it’s all tied together by the myth of Prometheus and some beautiful poetry from Daneil, a line of which sums up the spirit of the collection perfectly: “this compilation is a deep scream from modern gods; the flame that is still alive in this new century.”
La llama de Prometeo: La puerta de entrada a las Nuevas Músicas Españolas (Discómanos, 2018)
We begin with Suso Sáiz’s “El mar que tendrá el mar” and the sounds of waves crashing to shore. Pastoral piano lullabies are shrouded in fog as bass arpeggios background crystalline leads that splash through sea-foam pools. Then comes the stunningly gorgeous and tear-inducing “Reloj de luna (María)” by Pedro Esteven, where heavenly piano chords hover in the air as heart-melting string orchestrating rain down. Chiming starshine electronics move gently through synthetic layers of violin, viola, and cello…their melodies evoking heartbreak and lost romance as layers of new age space music float the soul. At some point, an operatic angel voice enters, her wordless dreamspells swaying through dark hazes into radiant baths of moonlight while strings, voices, and pianos all surge together to lift the heart towards the sky and atmospheric bass pulses carry everything towards cloudrealms of paradise enchantment. In Finis Africae’s “Olas a Formentera,” joyous whistles fly above seaside reed orchestrations and thumping acoustic bass textures until someone calls out the song’s title, at which point we drop into a sun-soaked balearic folk dance. Riffing string instruments and soloing sitars play to the spirits of the sea and sky, their shuffling magic and waves of propulsive acoustic wonder surfed on by island breeze accordions while guitars solo and double basses thump ecstatically. Elsewhere the mix spaces out, leaving zithers and six-strings to solo softly above pulsing bass movements and sea-shanty reeds while deep and entrancing vocals chant “Formentera” from atop the rocky cliffs of Es Vedra.
Pianos, marimbas, kalimbas, and other solar idiophones dance beneath starlight bell tapestries in Alberto Garralon’s “Iria Feliz,” while rainforest hand drums hold down an airy groove. Wavering guitar solos alternate with ghostly synth leads that squiggle through a sunrise sky and there are gamelan evocations in the way the interlocking loops of exotic metal generate hallucinogenic polyrhythms, with everything being wrapped around by aquatic organ waves. When the rhythms pull out, we find ourselves in a swooning section of nostalgic beauty, where FM synth fluids cycle around sprightly guitar patterns…everything moving together in a dance of multi-layered rhythms as organs drone out beneath noir-pop atmospheres that recall Angelo Badalamenti. One of the most surprising cuts comes from Juan Veron and Pedro Lahoze. Their “Adventures Flavour” locks ethnological drum explorations and alien hand percussion vocalisms into a hypno-groove that moves beneath wavering chime tapestries. Majestic synths, organs, and pianos climb through sparkling clouds of gold while dripping cosmic liquids coat skronking woodwinds. The ivory melodies are tracked by swelling space pads and ominous brass textures bring airs of exotic funk and Zeuhl prog. All the while, solar melodics skip through rainbow flower fields and the ritualist percussion energies merge with sonic clouds of ceremonial fusion fire.
The B-side opens with “Final sin pauses” by Iury Lech. Deep piano pulsations envelop the spirit in a fog of bass warmth as shadow and light swirl together. A mermaid sings out from oceanic depths with wordless songs of ancient magic…her mellifluous voice backed by ghostly male harmonizations as it all comes together for an aquatic aria of profound beauty. Ivory incantations and mystical voices coalesce and sooth the mind while the mix hisses and breaths with analog warmth and towards the end, the track gives itself over completely to haunted drone clouds built from dark and mysterious oscillations. The esoterica of Pablo Guerrero’s “Dragones negros” follows, with bowed string drones conjuring subterranean spirits. The mix is further adorned by bucolic windchimes while a sensuous and calming voice enters to entrance the mind, its enigmatic stories occasionally receding as harmonious clouds of ambiance swell and glow with a spectral light. The mesmerizing sonic motions are suffused by starshine chime tones and sometimes the vocalist zones out into pure throat singing and passages that resemble yodeling or Sami joiking. The droning voice fluids are backed by submarine clarinets that swim through the ever-present cascades of sparkling metal and the way these haunted woodwinds seem to float on a spectral sea of amorphous new age magic presages by decades one of my favorite songs: Eleventeen Eston’s “I Float, I am Free.” And as swirls of sound build towards slow motion ecstasy, the hypnotizing voice returns to entice the soul back to earthly realms.
Antonio García’s “Guitarra primitive” features bubbling hand drums soaring beneath the kind of metal-against-guitar string noise associated with GY!BE’s Efrim Menuck. There are shadows of Roy Montgomery and Loren MazzaCane Connors as well in the way the searing waves of droning guitar push the mind towards bliss and as the wailing six-string orchestrations drop away, they are replaced by strange sliding tones..like drops of silver ether moving upwards along the walls of a crystal cavern. The delay fx on the hand drums morph in and out of phase and generate feverish polyrhythms in a way reminiscent of early Popol Vuh and Ash Ra Tempel and the track spends the rest of its time alternating between careening bowed guitar atmospheres and sci-fi sliding fluids until the beats drop away for a coda of pure ambient shimmer. We end with Eliseo Parra’s “Noche tranquil y serena,” which sees the calming beachside field recordings return as waves crash and seabirds sing softly. A zither modulates under aqueous phaser waves while wrapping the mind around with dazzling runs and enchanting ocean romantics. Glistening chime strands decay towards a blood red sunset and a mystical voice calls out above it all, his sliding modalities evoking a mythical Iberian ritualism. As the track progresses, a head nodding downbeat groove emerges and floats on throbbing bass currents while high in the sky, psychedelic string clouds drop subtle waves of strummed starlight and wood flutes harmonize together as they summon shadow spirits from forgotten realms.
(images from my personal copy)
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FOR THIRD WEEK IN A ROW, ABC NEWS’ ‘NIGHTLINE’ IS NO. 1 IN TOTAL VIEWERS, ADULTS 25-54, AND ADULTS 18-49
‘Nightline’ Grows Across the Board Year to Year and Week to Week Hitting Season Highs in All Demos
‘Nightline’ Delivers Strongest Performance in Total Viewers and Adults 25-54 in 16 Months, and in Adults 18-49 in 20 Months
As part of ABC News’ special “Guns in America,” ABC News national correspondent Mireya Villarreal interviews Dr. Roy Guerrero, the only pediatrician in Uvalde, Texas, and ABC News chief national correspondent Matt Gutman travels to a gun show in Harker Heights, Texas / *ABC News/Nightline
ABC News’ “Nightline” ranked No. 1 in Total Viewers (950,000), Adults 25-54 (302,000) and Adults 18-49 (245,000) for the 3rd week in a row during the week of June 6, 2022, based on Live + Same Day Data from Nielsen Media Research.
“Nightline” posted double-digit gains year to year in Total Viewers (+38% - 950,000 vs. 704,000), Adults 25-54 (+56% - 302,000 vs. 193,000) and Adults 18-49 (+68% - 245,000 vs. 146,000).
“Nightline” posted gains on the previous week in Total Viewers (+9% - 950,000 vs. 874,000), Adults 25-54 (+14% - 302,000 vs. 264,000) and Adults 18-49 (+27% - 245,000 vs. 193,000), hitting season highs across the board.
In fact, “Nightline” turned in its strongest performance in Total Viewers and Adults 25-54 in 16 months and best Adults 18-49 number in 20 months – since weeks of 2/15/21 and 10/5/20, respectively
On Wednesday (6/8/22), “Nightline” saw its top telecast in Total Viewers (1.380 million) and Adults 25-54 (474,000) in nearly 2 years and in Adults 18-49 (379,000) in 20 months — since 7/7/20, 6/2/20 and 9/30/20, respectively.
Season to date, “Nightline” is beating CBS’ “The Late Late Show with James Corden” in Adults 25-54 and Adults 18-49 for the 7th consecutive year — since the 2015-2016 season.
This week, “Nightline” included coverage of Dr. Roy Guerrero, the only pediatrician in Uvalde, Texas, hours before traveling to Washington, D.C., to testify in Congress, as well as gun owners’ feelings about raising the minimum age to buy an AR-15 as a part of ABC News’ special coverage “Guns in America”; the emotional pleas from survivors’ and victims’ family members demanding change from lawmakers on Capitol Hill following a string of mass shootings by gunmen using AR-15 style rifles in Uvalde, Texas and Buffalo, New York; documentary filmmaker Nick Quested, whose account and footage of the riot is a central piece of the Jan. 6 House Committee investigation; car thefts which are skyrocketing across the country; two transgender activists celebrating and sharing the pride and joy of Trans life; and former actress turned rock star Taylor Momsen.
NOTE: On Friday (6/10/22), CBS’ “The Late Late Show with James Corden” was retitled to “Late Late Show-JC—ENC,” and NBC’s “Late Night with Seth Meyers” was retitled to “Seth Meyers-SM.” The retitled telecasts are excluded from the weekly and season averages. CBS’ and NBC’s averages are based on four days (Monday-Thursday).
ABC News’ “Nightline” is late-night television’s prestigious, award-winning news program featuring the most powerful, in-depth stories that shape our lives and the world around us. It is anchored by Juju Chang and Byron Pitts. Eman Varoqua is executive producer. The program airs weeknights from 12:35 p.m.-1:05 a.m. EDT on ABC. “Nightline” has also produced numerous original documentaries available on ABC News digital platforms and Hulu.
Week of June 6, 2022
Source: The Nielsen Company, NTI Total Viewers, Adults 25-54 and Adults 18-49 Live + SD Current Week (w/o 6/6/22), Previous Week (w/o 5/30/22) and Year-Ago Week (w/o 6/7/21). Most Current: 2021 -2022 Season (9/20/21 – 6/12/22) and 2020 -2021 Season (9/21/20 – 6/13/21). Nielsen ratings for ABC, NBC and CBS include additional airings in select markets. Beginning 8/31/20, national ratings also include Out of Home (OOH) viewing. Averages based on regular telecasts.
*COPYRIGHT ©2022 American Broadcasting Companies, Inc. All photography is copyrighted material and is for editorial use only. Images are not to be archived, altered, duplicated, resold, retransmitted or used for any other purposes without written permission of ABC News. Images are distributed to the press in order to publicize current programming. Any other usage must be licensed. Photos posted for Web use must be at the low resolution of 72dpi, no larger than 2x3 in size.
For more information, follow ABC News PR on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.
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What we won't forget from the hearings on the Uvalde and Buffalo massacres
What we won’t forget from the hearings on the Uvalde and Buffalo massacres
Dr. Roy Guerrero, a pediatrician from Uvalde, Texas, testifies before the House Oversight and Reform Committee, June 8, 2022, on Capitol Hill. (Jason Andrew/The New York Times via AP, Pool)
Last week, I took a break from watching the devastating coverage of the school massacre in Uvalde, Texas. I have family there and watched as long as I could. But a day came when it started to feel morbid and…
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An Uvalde pediatrician says he will ‘never forget what I saw’ after the shooting.
By Nicholas Bogel-Burroughs
Dr. Roy Guerrero described to members of Congress on Wednesday the horrors he experienced as he treated wounded and dying students.
Published: June 7, 2022 at 05:00PM
from U.S.
via New York TimesNYT
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'She had blood everywhere': Uvalde pediatrician describes treating young girl
'She had blood everywhere': Uvalde pediatrician describes treating young girl
Pediatrician Dr. Roy Guerrero tells CNN’s John Berman about dealing with the aftermath of the Uvalde school shooting.
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Granstanding no doubt. It probably wasn’t really that bad. Snowflake needs to toughen up.
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Maimouna Youssef y Amigos darán Concierto en La Nana,
Fábrica de Creación e Innovación
** El sábado 21 de septiembre, impartirá una Clase Magistral para músicos, a las 15:30 horas y a las 19:00 horas dará un Concierto de Hip Hop en el espacio de la Colonia Guerrero, mismo que abrirá Ehya Disonante, Ensamble de La Nana. Ambas actividades son gratuitas
El Consorcio Internacional Arte y Escuela A.C. (ConArte), se honra en recibir a la cantante y compositora estadounidense Maimouna Youssef aka Mumu Fresh, quien ha causado sensación en la escena musical independiente como solista. Desde que recibió una nominación a los Premios Grammy por su participación como cantante en el éxito musical “Don’t Feel Right” de The Roots en 2007, Maimouna Youssef ha asombrado al mundo con su calidad vocal y su personalísima forma de interpretar el Hip Hop.
El próximo sábado 21 de octubre, a las 15:30 horas, Maimouna Youssef aka Mumu Fresh impartirá una Clase Magistral dirigida a profesionales y estudiantes de música. El acceso es gratuito, basta con inscribirse en los teléfonos 5518 5424 y 5518 7841, Exts. 112 y 115. Y a las 19:00 horas del mismo día, se llevará a cabo un Gran Concierto de Hip Hop: Maimouna Youssef and friends, en el que participarán, además de la cantante, A. D. Harmon, Eric Parker, Jabari Exum y John Pollard. Abrirá el concierto Ehya Disonante, Ensamble de La Nana, bajo la dirección de Enrique Jiménez y Antonio Basurto. La entrada es libre y ambas actividades se llevarán a cabo en La Nana (Segundo Callejón San Juan de Dios Núm. 25, Col. Guerrero).
La Embajada de Estados Unidos hace posible la llegada de Maimouna Youssef a México, gracias a la Oficina de Asuntos Educativos y Culturales del Departamento de Estado de los Estados Unidos, que se ha asociado con American Voices para colaborar, a través del programa American Music Abroad (AMA). AMA se basa en el legado histórico de los embajadores del jazz del Departamento de Estado, que viajaron por primera vez por el mundo durante la década de 1950, para establecer lazos a través de la música. Los grupos de AMA llevan a cabo conciertos públicos, actuaciones colaborativas con músicos locales, conferencias con demostraciones, talleres y encuentros informales de improvisación musical con estudiantes y asistentes. Los grupos de la American Music Abroad han actuado ante públicos de 42 países y se seleccionan de acuerdo con la calidad artística y al compromiso educativo y cultural.
MAIMOUNA YOUSSEF
Maimouna ha sacudido los escenarios de muchos lugares de renombre como Denver, el Red Rocks Amphitheater de Colorado, el legendario Carnegie Hall de Nueva York, el Radio City Music Hall, el Kennedy Center y el Carter Barron Amphitheater de Washington D. C., así como festivales nacionales e internacionales y escenarios como el Montreux Jazz Festival de Suiza; el Cape Town Jazz Festival de Sudáfrica; el legendario New Africa Shrine de Lagos, Nigeria; el Art of Cool Festival de Durham, CN; el Capital Jazz Cruise, el Grammy Festival At Sea y el Beverly Bond’s Black Girls Rock. En 2016 fue elegida para ejercer el cargo de gobernadora en la sede de Washington D. C. de la junta de la Academia Nacional de Artes y Ciencias de la Grabación.
Lanzó su primer EP en solitario: “Black Magic Woman”, de manera independiente, en marzo de 2011, y su muy esperado y ampliamente elogiado primer álbum en solitario, “The Blooming”, en septiembre del mismo año. En el proyecto de Maimouna de 2014, “The Reintroduction of Mumu Fresh”, se pudieron ver sus grandes habilidades de rima como maestra de ceremonias y su gran compromiso por ofrecer una visión equilibrada sobre temas actuales de índole social, racial, política, de género y de clase social. Maimouna tiene tres proyectos programados que saldrán a la luz a lo largo del 2017.
Youssef no es solo la típica artista, promueve talleres en conferencias e instituciones de aprendizaje para los jóvenes sobre diversos temas como la justicia social a través del arte, la educación innovadora, la técnica vocal, el entrenamiento del oído y la composición de música para que cada uno encuentre su propio sonido único. En noviembre de 2011, la organización sin ánimo de lucro con sede en Washington D. C., One Common Unity, otorgó a Maimouna el título de “Artista del año” por su dedicación y compromiso con el empoderamiento de los jóvenes con pocos recursos. La actuación en directo de Maimouna te lleva por un emocionante paseo a través de sus muchas influencias musicales, abarcando los lejanos rincones del rock, el jazz, el soul vintage y acústico, el R&B y el duro hip hop. Ya sea acompañada sólo por voces o por su banda, su encanto magnético, su presencia electrizante en escena y su estilo vocal único demuestran que tiene el tesón de una estrella y seguro que convertirá a cualquier no creyente en creyente.
A. D. HARMON
La muy solicitada vocalista de apoyo profesional, Amber “A. D.” Harmon obtuvo el título de licenciada en Música por la Universidad de Talladega en 2008 y el título de máster en interpretación de música por la histórica Universidad Estatal de Morgan en 2011. Desde entonces, ha estado viajando a nivel nacional e internacional junto con grandes artistas como Vashawn Mitchell, Regina Bell, Maysa, Maimouna Youssef y Jason Nelson. Ha viajado como vocalista de apoyo a países como Sudáfrica, China, Canadá, Columbia, Sudamérica y Países Bajos. Algunos de los escenarios de festivales que ha pisado son el “Art OF Cool festival” y el “African American Jazz festival”, en Carolina del Norte, el “Capital Jazz Festival” en Washington D. C. y el “Capital Jazz Super Cruise” con el que recorrió las islas del Caribe.
A. D. Harmon es vocalmente versátil y se adapta rápidamente a nuevos estilos y géneros. Harmon tiene amplios conocimientos sobre la teoría de la música y es una rica fuente de conocimiento musical que espera ser compartido.
La discografía de Harmon grabada en un estudio de grabación incluye coros en los álbumes “Secret Place” de Vashawn Mitchell, “Tell the world” de Amos Saint-Jean, “Don’t let go” y “Incredible” de Gerald Scott y “Soundz of Afrika” de Sonnie Badu.
Aparte de sus esfuerzos musicales, Amber estudió cursos de nivel Avanzado de español de noveno curso hasta su primer año de universidad en Talladega. Se siente cómoda cantando en español, así como en otras lenguas como el lakota, el portugués y el zulú.
ERIC PARKER
En 1999, Eric fundó su propia editorial, E-Styles Publishing. En 2002, compuso y produjo “Will You Stick With Me”, primer sencillo incluido en el primer álbum de Mike Phillips “You Have Reached Mike Phillips” (Hidden Beach/Sony Records). Eric es el director musical de Mike Phillips y continúa haciendo giras con él en diferentes partes del país, durante todo el año.
Eric Parker ha sido teclista de artistas legendarios como Stevie Wonder, George Duke, Lalah Hathaway, Keri Hilson, Chrisette Michelle, así como de otros artistas conocidos del Jazz, Gospel, R&B, Soul y Hip Hop. Eric formó parte también de la banda de los premios Soul Train Music Awards durante dos años consecutivos a partir de 2010.
En 2010, Eric pasó a formar parte de Spur of the Moment, una banda de smooth jazz y R&B éxito de ventas en la que lleva más de 20 años. El nuevo CD de Spur está programado para que salga a la luz en marzo de este año. La canción titulada “N 2 Deep” aparecerá en una película que se estrenará a finales de 2014. Spur of the Moment ha sido la “superbanda” de la casa durante los últimos 8 años en el Capital Jazz Cruise, que zarpa anualmente en otoño.
Cuando Eric no está de gira trabajando con otro artista, está en el estudio componiendo canciones y música para su propio proyecto. Así que como puedes ver, estamos hablando de un artista extraordinariamente talentoso y profesional, que solo ha empezado a mostrar la punta del iceberg de su promesa musical.
JABARI EXUM
Jabari “Factor-X” Exum es un cantante impresionante nacido y criado en Washington D. C. Es un experto percusionista en la tradición latina y de África Occidental y es un prolífico compositor y artista de hip-hop. Desde 1997, Jabari ha sido también un artista pionero de un movimiento llamado, “Hip-Hop Theater”. La manera que tiene Jabari de hacer las cosas es única y poco convencional, ya que es capaz de sacar influencias de muchas fuentes diferentes. Ha estado actuando, tocando la percusión y rapeando desde que tenía dos años y ha sido bendecido con la oportunidad de ser asesorado por algunos de los grandes de muchos campos del estudio creativo. Algunos de sus mentores han sido Debbie Allen Chadwick Boseman, Reggie & Roy Wooten, Mamady Keita, Grady Tate, Djimo Kouyate, KRSOne, Sonya Sanchez, Glen Turner, Chucky Thompson, Bill Summers Leon Mobley, Rickie Byars Beckwith, Robert Nothern, Mamadi Nyasuma, Baba Barnett y Marc Cary.
Actualmente, el Sr. Exum es miembro del dúo de hip-hop “Hueman Prophets” (Estados Unidos); Farafina Kan (orquesta de percusión del África Occidental) (Estados Unidos); HHP (pioneros del hip´-hop de Sudáfrica) (SA); y SAHEL (conjunto de música del mundo). Es profesor de percusión, mentor de escritura y músico y compositor a tiempo completo. Ha trabajado con artistas como Chadwick Boseman, Raheem DeVaughn Nova Nelson, Dr. Cornel West & The Cornel West Theory, Larry Mitchell, Tarus Mateen, Mark Cary, Maimouna Youssef, Carolyn Malachi, Dawn Avery, Federico Pena, Weedie Braimah, Michael Bowie y Ayanna Gregory. Es el creador de la Underground Mobile Store, “Congo Square” (diseñada para aumentar la accesibilidad de artistas positivos e independientes de todas partes del mundo). Es un producto de orgullo tanto del programa de música de la Howard University como de la Duke Ellington School of the Arts.
JOHN POLLARD
John Pollard nació el 28 de octubre de 1975 en Philadelphia, PA y es hijo del Rev. y la Sra. James A. Pollard. John se graduó según el sistema escolar del distrito de Lower Merion y fue a la Howard University de Washington D. C., en la que obtuvo un título de grado y de máster en Educación Musical. John ha sido profesor, intérprete y productor musical durante más de 20 años y padre orgulloso. Planea continuar con su legado de actuar y enseñar música durante muchos años.
EHYA DISONANTE, ENSAMBLE DE LA NANA
En La Nana, Fábrica de Creación e Innovación, ConArte trabaja por los derechos culturales de los niños, niñas, jóvenes y adultos. Aquí también formamos maestros, brindamos educación en artes en las escuelas y hacemos comunidad.
ConArte cuenta con un laboratorio metodológico y pedagógico, ubicado en La Nana, Fábrica de Creación e Innovación, su sede y centro formativo, donde se exploran nuevas prácticas educativas, se forma a maestros de aula, artistas y comunidades urbanas. Ahí se trabaja también en torno a nuevas prácticas comunitarias y por la recuperación del entorno urbano. De esta forma, existe un intenso diálogo entre escuelas, diversas comunidades y La Nana, espacio donde se transmiten las metodologías ConArte.
Ehya Disonante es el resultado de la convocatoria que ConArte hizo en 2016 a jóvenes, adolescentes y adultos para crear un colectivo donde la música fuera explorada desde la diversidad y la convivencia, con el sello propio de ConArte.
Su nombre evoca el impulso que los nutre al tocar la música, pues “Ehya” proviene de la palabra Ñañu (conocido como Otomí) que significa “alegría”.
Ehya Disonante, Ensamble de La Nana, integra a 16 ejecutantes de diversos instrumentos, los cuales oscilan entre los 15 y 64 años, bajo la dirección de Enrique Jiménez y Antonio Basurto, artistas y formadores de ConArte.
Ehya Disonante está Integrado por: Liliana Islas Flores, Roberto González López, Anel Cristina Zenteno ilchis, Antonio Álvarez Pineda, César Daniel López García, Diego Jiménez García, José Gilberto Hernández Dorantes, Jesús Elser Alfaro Sánchez, José Luis Ramírez Rosano, Miguel Ángel Villanueva Aguilar, Oscar Daniel Pompa Chávez, Perla Hernández Cortés, Yurenka Hernández Vazquez, Jimena García Martínez, Rodolfo Tonatiuh Zamarrón Mosqueda, Nahielly Acevedo Martínez. Bajo la dirección artística de Enrique Jiménez y Antonio Basurto.
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ACC Posts Record Number of Dual Degree Grads
During an Alvin Community College Commencement ceremony on May 18, another record number of Alvin, Manvel, Shadow Creek and Turner high school students walked across the stage just weeks ahead of getting their high school diplomas.
This year also featured the first graduates from Danbury and Living Stone high schools: Joaqin Phillips and Kaysie Perkins, respectively.
“We are very proud of the growing number of Dual Degree graduates,” ACC President Dr. Christal M. Albrecht said. “These young men and women are highly intelligent, driven, and motivated individuals who now have a jump-start on their education and have substantially reduced the costs associated with a degree.”
ACC had 160 students complete 60 hours of college coursework through participation in the Alvin Community College Dual Credit-Dual Degree program and complete their Associate Degree in General Studies. Twenty-four students also received certificates from the Welding and Pharmacy programs.
Most Dual Degree graduate students begin their journey as freshmen, taking classes on their high school campus and any additional courses needed at ACC or online. Advisors say it takes a lot of work and the students have to stay on task.
“Each year our Dual Degree graduates continue to grow. It is a true testament to the ambition, drive, and fortitude of the students and the ACC program, faculty and staff,” said Akilah Martin, ACC Director of College and Career Pathway.
Students seeking the associates degree have increased dramatically since ACC's first dual degree grad, Thomas Schuenemann, in 2008. Since the first graduate, the ACC Dual Credit program has had 657 students participate in commencement. There are now approximately 1,900 students enrolled in the dual credit program at eight area high schools.
Danbury High School: Joaqin Phillips
Living Stone School: Kaysie Perkins
Dawson High School: Taylor Hall
Pearland High School: Jacqueline Tran
Alvin High School: Edna Burgos, Joselin Burgos, Haley Dietrich, Monica Dominguez, Alysse East, Alexis Garcia, Lizbeth GarciaCalero, Makayla Guerrero, Dominique Luna, Jake Nelson, Jordan Oxsheer, Nathaniel Ramirez, Andres Reyna, Kenton Ritter, Cheyenne Slaughter, Jennifer Tankink, Alexandria Willbond and Tyler Williams.
Manvel High School: Anahi Altamirano, Matthew Atteberry, Emily Drilling, Kelly Hejtmancik, Barbara Lomeli-Ibarra, Ashley Jackson, Isiah Johnson, Pichhapoanraingsey Kheang, Denali Klein, Hannah Knight, Zackary Meade, Katherine Moore , Raelanah Nieves, Sandra Ortiz, Christopher Rangel, Gabriel Sanes, Sabrina Vazquez and Tessa Williams.
Shadow Creek High School: Adedolapo Akorede, Karina Cancino, Danielle Coca, Jara Go, Martina Herrera, Abigail Husain, Savannah Kornrumph, Samira Lott, Bianca Montemayor, Alyssa Ocampo, Tamia Peters, Genesis Rios, Yelonde Saunders, Chelsea Saya-Ang, Faishel Saya-Ang, Aylen Sosa, Murielle Tio, Fred Trevino and Leah Vu.
Turner High School: Amitabh Chandra, Jahdiel Chavez, Laura Coate, Endra Cosby II, Cameron Davidson, Ashley Dinh, Melody Do, Brendon Farmer, Victoria Fernandez, William Fisher, Cira-Marie Frias, Elijah Garcia, Denise Garcia, Danielle Garza, Stacey Gillis, Julia Hensley, Erika Hernandez, Crystal Hernandez, Nazareth Hernandez, Noemi Hernandez-Briseno, Kendall Homes, Jenny Horton, Kennedy Howski, Chase Huhn, Rayce Humphries, Duaa Jaweed, Jacob Knapp, Alan Kottoor, Erin Kroeger, Matthew Lair, Renea Landry, Schuyler Larson, Stevie Lee, Benjamin Lewis, Jacob Loberg, Sting Mai, Roberta Minter, Debanhi Montemayor, Hannah Montemayor, Penelope Moreno, Justin Nguyen, Anh Nguyen, Gwyneth Obediente, Alyssa Olivares, Alyssa Osorio, Jacob Phillips, Jonathan Prince, Shelby Rios, Jordan Ripley, Cristal Rivera, Aliya Rivera, Katelyn Romero, Spencer Roy, Janie Salazar, Jasmine Samemy, Arturo Sanchez Jr., Emma Schulz, Cristina Simcox, William Sipes, Jason Sosa, Michael Stansbury, Maggie Stephens, Parker Stepp, Noah Stowers, Camille Surima, Ashton Tamez, Delores Vanhoose, Abby Vu, Caden Walker, Jared Weaver, Laken Williams and Shatrine Zachary.
Pharmacy certificate recipients: Raquel Mata, Noemi Pulido and Kristen Soto.
Welding certificate graduates: Joel Barron, Jason Bynum, Jose Cina, Isai Cruz, Gunner Dibble, Brendan Diffley, Carlos Espino, Grayson Fontenot, Alfredo Garcia, Leonardo Gaspar, Kaiden Guerrero, Prentice James, Juan Leal, Jordan Lewis, James Moore, Guillermo Ojeda Isabel, Ruben Ortega, Christopher Salazar, Edward Scharnberg, Ethan Thompson and Angel Vega.
For more information about the Dual Degree program, visit www.alvincollege.edu/dualcredit.
0 notes
Civil Service Exam (CSE) Results August 2019 (Professional) | Region 9 List Of Passers
The Civil Service Commission or also known as CSC has released the results of the Civil Service Exam – Pen and Paper Test (CSE-PPT) for both the Professional and Subprofessional levels which was scheduled last August 4, 2019.
You will find the list of names of all who passed the Civil Service Exam (CSE) for both the Professional and Subprofessional levels in this site as well as the names of the exam takers who made it to the Top 10 once the data is made available by the CSC.
Below is the full List of Passers
August 4, 2019 Civil Service Exam – Pen & Paper Test (CSE-PPT)
Professional Level – List of Passers
Civil Service Commission Regional Office No. 9 (Zamboanga Peninsula)
ABALLE, IAN JESTON L
ABDELRAHMAN, SAMEE S
ABDULAJID, RAFIE A
ABDULMAJED, NABELLAH T
ABELLA, TROIDJAN PAUL A
ABENES, DARREN AL B
ABES, GLAZEL C
ABILA, AIAN JAMES A
ABO-ABO, ERNIE MARK E
ABOC, ALYSSA KYLE M
ABOGA-A, MELSON B
ABREA, KRIZZIA KATE J
ACADEMIA, CRISANTO E
ACAMA, NEEM VIVIEN G
ACAPULCO, PHIL STEPHEN T
ACAYLAR, FRETZ E
ACEBEDO, JOHN RHYLL O
ACERVO, JOEBERT M
ACHAY, JUNELL ANN L
ADRAINCEM, ERMILLE A
ADRAINCEM, KEVIN VINCENT C
AGUA, ROBERT JR. L
AGUILAR, KAY ERIKA ODHEZ DR
AGUILERA, ALYSSA ISABELLE A
AGUIRRE, ROMEL A
AGUSTIN, ALDOUS JOHN B
AGUSTIN, DANNA JYN D
AHALUL, AREEJ A
AHMAD, AFZAL QADRI B
ALABAN, JONIE O
ALABASTRO, CHERRIE-ANN C
ALANO, DARWISA J
ALBAIN, MUHAMMAD ASHRAF J
ALBANI, ABDUL MUJHIB A
ALBUTRA, JESERY MAE O
ALCAZAR, ARJEE S
ALCOSEBA, JAZZEN MAE V
ALEGARBES, JAYA C
ALEJANDRO, GERALD J
ALFARO, KELLIE ROBYN A
ALIAWAN, CHARLENE MAE T
ALICAWAY, CHICKO H
ALLONES, LUTCHIE Q
ALMEROL, PHOEBE EVERLYN C
ALOTA, SUZETTE V
ALVAREZ, CHARLOTTE JOYCE V
AMAR, FRENZIL MAY M
AMBA, RENATO JR. N
AMILHAMJA, FATIMA ALSHAIMA B
AMIN, STEFFANY LORENCE F
AMPARADO, BLESSEL G
AMPARADO, MELODY G
ANASTACIO, GRACIELLE MAE F
ANCIANO, ANNIE ROSE M
ANDAING, NADZMI A
ANDALES, MELDGYRIE MAE M
ANGELES, KIMBERLY B
ANGELES, MUCTAR K
ANGELES, RALPH SAMUEL G
ANINGALAN, FATIMA HAIZEL T
ANNIL, KASSANDRA G
ANTAO, MAILEN A
ANTIPUESTO, JEZREEL S
ANTIPUESTO, PROILAN P
APARRI, JEYZEL P
APDUA, JACKELYN P
APOLINARIO, CHERRY MAE V
APURADO, JOSEPH GRANT B
AQUIATAN, ELVIN T
ARANETA, MARY LOUISE G
ARANZADO, CHARLYN A
ARASAD, MAHPHUTH D
ARCEDE, JOBERT L
ARCHIDE, EFREN G
AREVALO, JOHN MATHEW L
AREVALO, STEPHANIE O
ARGOMIDO, MAYRIMAR P
ARIPIN, ALSON JR. M
ARROYO, MARJORIE B
ARSEÑA, WENDY C
ARSULA, SHIELYN GRACE A
ARTES, ZAADI KARL L
ASARANI, NURSIMA A
ASBI, CARIZA H
ASEDERA, REGINE P
ASULA, ARASHED A
AUSTERO, CRISMARIE BLENN L
AVELLANA, JACOB RAY A
AWA, JAPHET C
BABARAN, MARJORIE E
BABATID, DANETTE JANE P
BACALSO, LEOMAR S
BACARAT, ALORA A
BACHILLER, EMMANUEL JOHN P
BACLAAN, ANABELLA P
BADLISAN, SYLKEN M
BAGARES, IRENE JANE S
BAGARINAO, RISSHELL MAE G
BAGOTAO, MATET L
BAHONSUA, RHOZELL B
BAIRULLA, RAHMUMA L
BAKIL, BIENMANZOUR M
BALADAD, STEVEN PATRICK S
BALAGON, CARESSON Z
BALAIS, ALYSSA
BALASE, REINALYN Z
BALBUENA, ALGILYN R
BALILI, MICKEL Y
BALINDONG, RAIZA C
BALLADARES, JERALENE R
BANDOY, RESHIEL JADE D
BANGAYAN, HARVY T
BANLASAN, CHRISTIAN P
BANNISTER, CHARMINE GRACE L
BANTILAN, RYXYL T
BANZON, NEHEMIAH A
BAQUIRQUIR, APRIL MAE B
BARACOL, CHERLON Y
BARING, ANTONETTE M
BAROTE, GOLDWYN ANDREW S
BARROQUILLO, PINKY R
BASIBASI, KARL DINNES C
BATBATAN, RICHARD JR. D
BAYAN, ARAFAT G
BAYARAS, HAZEL ROSIE P
BAYBAYAN, MELANNE T
BAZAN, JAYMIE M
BELLO, ROANNE E
BENDAÑO, ARDIE C
BENDEBEL, REAGAN A
BENIGA, WILSON L
BENTAZAL, MARICHO M
BENZONAN, KURT JUSTINE
BERNANTE, PEACH AMBER G
BERNARDO, ALFREDO C
BERONDO, ANGELO KIM G
BESANA, JOEL JR. S
BIEN, PIA MAE M
BILLONES, JOHN DENZEL B
BIOLANGO, JOHN MARK B
BLANCO, JHOEMAR O
BLAS, ALBIN L
BODIONGAN, KRISTINE ROSE L
BOLANDO, JEANNE LOU R
BOLASO, BENITO Q
BOLIDO, CHRISTEL ANN C
BORREROS, DEMIE JANE B
BRENCES, NALYN K
BRIONES, JEAN CHRISTINE Y
BRUNO, ALI JIHAD L
BUCOY, SAMANTHA PATRIQUE S
BUD-OY, MARK JOSEPH S
BUDLONG, DEODAVID O
BURLAT, KIARAH S
BUSTAMANTE, EURLYN C
CABAHUG, RUTCHELEM S
CABALANG, LEONARD J
CABANATAN, KEN NIGEL O
CABILIN, LORYVIE B
CABRERA, APRIL LORRAINE M
CABRIARA, ELIESER F
CACDAO, LORENZE GERALD R
CADANO, JOANJETT Q
CADAVEDO, LEA JAMAICA O
CADIMAS, CRISTINA A
CAIGAN, ICRISH G
CAINTA, ROLLY Q
CAIS, DANICA SHEENE P
CALAPIZ, LEOVILLE II B
CALIB-OG, KRISTINE GRACE A
CALIGUID, AUGIE REMON B
CALIGUID, CRIZAH MAE G
CALOLOT, JOHN MICHAEL I
CALUNSAG, CLIVEN JUNE B
CAMBALON, QUELLY ANJELICA V
CANAPI, JHESRIE NICOLE L
CANDELASA, AILEEN B
CANDIA, CHRISTIAN CARL A
CANIEDO, ROBERT JR. O
CANOOG, CESAR JR. M
CANOY, NORIELLA MAE C
CAPACIO, LEADEAN JAY A
CARBONILLA, ISID ROY R
CARCUEVA, CLAUDINE B
CARCUEVA, MAYRIE CHIS A
CARGASON, JAROLD JAMES M
CARPIO, THALLIA F
CARUMBA, AVEL JUNDYLL T
CASCAJO, CHARMAINE GAY M
CASPE, CHONA B
CASTAÑO, JAMIE KAYLE A
CASTILLO, DEXIE DAWN P
CASTRO, MARY RONALAINE C
CATHAG, ANGEL FAITH R
CATINGUB, JOED C
CAYACAP, JESETTE LAIZA C
CAÑETE, MARYAN Q
CAÑETE, RANDY L
CELESTE, RINALYN A
CENECIRO, IRA FAYE C
CERNA, LANZ IRA A
CHIONG, JOE MARIE B
CLAMOHOY, JOSHUA C
COLMO, SIERRA MAE A
COLUMNAS, EJAY PAUL C
COMPRA, WILLA Y
CONCEPCION, CYRIL C
CONCEPCION, ROXELLE MARI J
CONSOLACION, SERGE KAREZZA R
CORDERO, LEVY ROSE L
CORPUZ, GABRIEL D
CORPUZ, MARIE ANGELIE J
CORTEZ, JOPHELYN B
COSCA, JOHN EDWARD C
COTILLAR, JOVELYN H
COYME, MIKKAH JOIE A
CRUMB, JANE ANGELEI T
CRUZ, CHRISTIAN EARL E
CUA, LAYNIE R
CUADRO, VANDER LOU M
CUENCA, QUENCY J
CUSTODIO, VINCE LOREANE I
DABODABO, CAMILLE S
DAGA-ANG, ARGEN ROSE S
DAGPIN, NIÑA MARICE R
DAGURAYAN, MAY JO ANN G
DALIDA, KRISTEL ANN G
DALIGDIG, MICHAEL JAMES A
DALINOG, REXEL MAY L
DALISAY, JEZREEL E
DAMAHAN, AL-HADEE D
DAMIAN, HAZEL T
DAMSANI, KURT A
DANDUAN, EMERSON S
DATARO, CHEMBERT P
DAYONDON, MARIA ELLA PEARL E
DE LA RAMA, KENNETH JORGE A
DE LEON, RODOLFO P
DE PEDRO, ASNAERA
DECENA, JERSAM A
DECIN, ANGELYN I
DEKIT, JOVIH IAN TIMOTHY B
DEL CASTILLO, SEAN VINCENT M
DELA CRUZ, BRYLE A
DELA CRUZ, JOERESA B
DELA CRUZ, JOHN DEAN D
DELA LUNA, KEVIN RAY F
DELA PEÑA, MARIA STEPHANIE LOU T
DELA TORRE, JENNY G
DELFIN, KIEFER REYNEL J
DELOS SANTOS, CHAD E
DELUMBAR, VINCENT RYAN L
DENURA, KHARLA JOY D
DERAMA, ROY E
DESAMPARADO, MIRAFLOR C
DIAZ, JOHN MARK A
DIMAS, ARIANE SACHIKO
DINOPOL, RALPH VINCENT P
DIONSAY, GERALDIN T
DIÑO, LEOMEL F
DOCUMENTO, TZEITEL ROSE O
DOLAR, PETER JOHN A
DOLOGUIN, SHANE IVORY L
DONOR, CHRISSEL NICOLE P
DUHIG, CHERRY MAE T
DURAN, ESTHER GRACE S
DURENS, JAY G
EBOL, ADRIAN V
EJADA, ANGEL JOY C
ELDIAN, JESSA NIAH A
ELEPE, ANABELLE Q
ELIA, JOSHUA JEAR R
ELUMBARING, FELIZARDO JR. B
EMBODO, MONA LIZA E
EMELIANO, FROILAN A
EMMANUEL, KENNETH B
EMPUESTO, FATIMA M
ENDEREZ, MA CELINA T
ENRIQUEZ, ANGELIQUE C
ENRIQUEZ, JANNEL R
ENRIQUEZ, PRINCEL JOY G
ENRIQUEZ, RAY JANNER Y
EROJO, KLIAR EDWARD A
ESCABARTE, GABRIEL D
ESCARES, KAREN JOY P
ESCORIAL, JOICY FAITH A
ESOLANA, MARY JANE L
ESTERA, DEBBIE B
ESTOR, HAZEL C
ESTRADA, ALEN TROY R
ESTRADA, DANICA ROSE A
EUGENIO, JOSE MA M
EUGENIO, RONY G
EVANGELIO, MARVIN P
EVANGELISTA, BRYAN A
EYA, SARAH B
FALCASANTOS, GERARDO E
FALCASANTOS, KYLA MARIE C
FALCASANTOS, LYKA MARIE C
FALCATAN, ERICA JEAN S
FALCONETE, APPOL C
FERMO, ERFAMAE DR
FERNANDEZ, CECILE M
FERNANDEZ, JENIFER W
FERNANDEZ, OLSON L
FERNANDO, ARMAN JUSTIN A
FLOR, FLORENCIO JR. M
FLORENTINO, MARY GRACE Y
FLORES, GRECIL JANE L
FLORES, MAUREEN KAYE V
FLORIDA, ALMA G
FLORIDA, MARK ZION A
FLORIDA, XYRONE JOSHUA A
FORGOSA, LOREXSAM A
FORTICH, KRISTINE T
FRANCISCO, ROXAN LOUELLA H
FUNDADOR, DAVE R
GA-AS, MARY CINDY A
GABASA, CHRISTINE M
GABATA, JULIA ARNIE MISCHELLE A
GABITANAN, RHEA MAE A
GABURNO, CAMILLE S
GABUTERO, JENELYN L
GALLEPOSO, ALFREDO JR. C
GAMBOL, MARIA IRENE STEFANI G
GAMOROT, QUEENIE LANE C
GAMPONG, GESELLE ELIZABETH C
GANUB, ROSEVIE R
GARCEL, MYRTLE C
GARCIA, MA ESTELLA H
GARCIA, MICHELLE R
GARCIA, RAGDEE N
GARCIA, SUZEYNE KIM L
GARDE, MERYSON W
GENSAYA, RAZVY A
GEROMO, MARYCOR M
GICOLE, REINNA VENNA O
GILDORE, LOVELLA P
GLACITA, YUNIKO JADE C
GOMEZ, MELVI KLIN P
GOMEZ, RUSHEL MAE G
GONZAGA, WINDIE MAE E
GONZALES, JHOANNA MARIE P
GOZALO, JEDARLIN M
GRANADA, KRISSIA MAY H
GREGORIO, EMYL JAY A
GREGORIO, JOANNA L
GUERRERO, LEIA CATHERINE B
GUIGUE, LORAINE FAITH D
GUITARTE, CHRISTY M
GUMAMAY, REYMAR JAN T
GURDIEL, HONEY ROSE A
GURREA, AUDRIE B
GUTIERA, CLYDIE ANTHONY R
HAMAN, RIDZNA R
HAMJA, MANSOUR M
HAMOY, LINSLY ANN M
HAPAS, AL-AMIN T
HAYO, ALDRIN P
HAYUDINI, SAMIER A
HESULA, KENITH C
HIYAN, MAE RACHEL B
HO, ALLYSSA DUANE CASSANDRA C
HORTELANO, MARIA ELMA M
HUSIN, YAIZA S
HUSSIN, AL-KHARIDZ S
IBAYA, CALVIN KLEIN C
IBAÑEZ, JERRIEL M
ICAO, JYPTSCL T
ILUL, RAJIV M
IMLAN, IMED-YASIR T
INDUS, LIEZEL S
INFANTE, CRISTY JOY B
INFANTE, FIONA KRISTELLE R
INGKOH, FATIMA AYSELAINE R
INTONG, REE JAY E
INVENTOR, TRISHA T
ISMAEL, SHER-ANNA J
ISOGON, PRIME SAMUEL P
JAJI, WINNOR H
JAJURIE, ABBASHIR A
JAKOSALEM, MONICA E
JAMAROLIN, JR A
JANIPIN, CHRISTIAN V
JARA, CHRYSTANE COLLINE F
JARADIL, AHMAD GASYR A
JARADIL, SITTI AISA A
JARANILLA, LOUISE FRANCES P
JAVATE, DAZYL IRIS P
JAVIER, ANGELIKA B
JEBONE, ALVIN FRANZ T
JIMENEZ, ELLA JANE B
JOCSON, IMRAN ELIA KHAN A
JOLO, LERA GRACE C
JUATON, BERNIE A
JUATON, KEENA E
JUHASAN, FADZRAMA I
JULASIRI, ANAMEL A
JULKANAIN, NUR-IDAYU F
JUMALA, SUELYN K
JUMALON, PRINCESS JHOY D
JUMARAN, RAZEL C
KAGATAN, ROWENA D
KAGATAN, ROXANNE MARIE D
KALBI, NUR-JAYA G
KARIM, MARIA JERICA V
KHIO, ALECSI GUILE ANDREI B
KIRAM, NILAKASUMA M
KUAN, KATHRYN ROSE P
KUE, AXEL FAHAD T
KUNTING, ABDULRAHMAN M
LACASTE, SHEILA B
LACASTESANTOS, LILYDEN
LACBAO, LEA DIANE P
LACTUAN, KIMBERLY N
LAGARE, CHRISTINE S
LAGAS, DANICA LORRAINE V
LAGOC, GENIE VAH C
LAGROMA, HAZEL Z
LALANGAN, MARVIN M
LALI, CATRENE M
LANUZA, GERALDINE P
LAPINIG, MARY JOY S
LAPUT, PRINCESS L
LARA, KASSELL MANILOU J
LARAGA, HYACINTH CLAIRE G
LARUPAY, COLEEN JIL B
LASCO, NYL C
LAYOGUE, RECA S
LAZARO, BENNY LOYD S
LEE, MARK ANTHONY P
LEGASPI, MARY KRIS B
LEMANA, NESTOR IAN S
LIBRANDO, LLOYD GIMEEL D
LICERA, LADY DAWN L
LIM, CHRISTIAN PAUL S
LIM, HANNAH CHRISTINE B
LIM, RUSSEL THOMAS T
LIMBAGA, MARK CLINTON L
LIMJOCO, JAYVEE BRYLLE T
LING, JUSTIN BRION B
LINTAG, CHRISTIANA DA
LLOREN, ANGELYN E
LONZON, MAE A
LOZADA, CLARENCE CLARE W
LOZADA, MARK JUSTINE A
LUCHAVEZ, JENECYL T
LUGO, ERICA JEAN A
LUMACAD, KENNEZL B
LUMANTAS, MARY DELIGHT H
LUMINGO, JOHNS’N ROSE A
LUMPINAS, JERMELINE E
LUNA, ALGER ANTHONE D
LUNTAYAO, IRISH JILL N
MACALINTAL, JIRAH R
MACANSANTOS, DEAN VINE L
MACASO, CHRISTHIAN DALE C
MACAY, GLENN GEORGE A
MACIAS, JODICK JOHN B
MACKLING, MUHAMMADNUR S
MADERAZO, DWAYNE TRISTAN A
MAGHINAY, DENMARK P
MAGNONOT, MARK ALFER B
MAGUINSAY, QUEENIE B
MALAGAR, MERA JANE M
MALAPANGUE, LEIZEL E
MALAZARTE, KATHY Q
MALDISA, SITTI SHANA J
MALINAO, IVAN JUSTINE E
MANATAD, ZULAYHA S
MANAYON, CHONA M
MANCAO, PINKY O
MANDA, FAIZA N
MANGKING, DAISA A
MANGRUBAN, MARIA GUILLENE S
MANGUBAT, ANNA PREES A
MANGUBAT, ESTHER C
MANUNDAN, CRISTINE P
MAQUILAN, MITZIE L
MAQUILING, PRENZ DIANNE I
MARA-AT, RINA GRACE B
MARABULAS, JOARA CANDY A
MARABULAS, KATHERINE R
MARACAG, NHERHAMA S
MARANIE, YUSOPH T
MARCIAL, CRIS ANN JAY
MARCOS, FELIZ EMMANUELLE G
MARIANO, KEPLANIE F
MARIANO, MONICA A
MARIWA, JOSE RAFHAEL C
MARTINEZ, WILFRED E
MARZAN, MAE MAUREEN SHEEN F
MARZON, SARAH KAYE M
MASIADO, JONELENE ROSE A
MAWALI, SHERWINA B
MAYORMITA, SHARISSE B
MEDALLE, HYZZER S
MEGALLON, ANGEL M
MELENDREZ, MARK C
MELITANTE, CHRISTIAN JAMES J
MENDOZA, ALVIN C
MENDOZA, JUDY ANN R
MENDREZA, JUVIE M
MENOR, NEMFA L
MERCADER, MARITESS R
MILAHAM, BEN-RAZIR JR. M
MINALANG, NURSAJID M
MINGOC, NEIL ALAIN L
MIRANDA, JEFFREY U
MIRANDA, RYAN ATOM A
MOHAMMAD, AIZA A
MOLDE, SETH GRACE Y
MONDING, WEBSTER DICK J
MONREAL, MICHAEL ROIE S
MONTALLANA, MICHAEL M
MONTALLANA, VALERIE BAHANDI V
MONTEGREJO, MARIA THERESA A
MONTERO, LOUEGY E
MONTEROSO, INNA CASSANDRA R
MONTES, PABLITO E
MORANDARTE, REINA MARIE J
MORGIA, CHRISTIAN JADE V
MORGIA, MARNEY B
MORIA, MAY RIEDEL M
MUAMMIL HALIL, ZIERELLE-AINEE C
MUCADDAMAN, MURSIM H
MUHARRANI, FATIMA ZARAH A
MUHARRANI, MARIA ANTONETTE Y
MUNDOY, PAUL D
MUSA, ABDEL AZIZ L
MUSA, AHMAD RASHIDEE J
MUSAHARI, MOHAMMAD S
MUSLIMIN, ABDULSALAM D
MUSTAFA, IRENE-SHARA A
NAGDAR, SHERMAHAL A
NARVAEZ, JOHN FRANCIS S
NASI, KASHRINA D
NATAA, FLORAMY D
NATIVIDAD, PAULO O
NAVALTA, RACEL T
NAVARRO, KHYD ROSE C
NAVARRO, SANGYLE M
NAÑUAL, EVA MAE L
NERY, MARIELCO H
NONO, AMEE-LOU B
NURHASAN, ADZHAR S
NUÑO, SHEIKHA G
OBNIMAGA, GELLY PAZ G
OBORDO, JEAN ROSE N
OBORDO, JONALYN P
OCAMPO, CHYLE JULES M
OCTUBRE, AIZA L
OGUIS, ROGIN S
OLINO, LEA S
OLIVEROS, JOAN B
OLIVEROS, LORRANE M
OLIVO, ALEXANDER L
OMAMALIN, VINCENT P
OMBOY, CARYL JOYCE L
ONG, REAH ANNE G
ORABE, MA DAYZZLE T
ORCULLO, ULYSSA POLLY B
ORETO, MAY IAN C
ORIGENES, KHRYSS MARIZ O
ORQUIJO, JENELYN S
OTAP, VANESSA JOYCE M
OTOD, CHERRY MAE C
PAALISBO, JEERAH G
PACARRO, KEEN BRYAN L
PACATANG, JULAN C
PACATANG, RHEA ANNA B
PACULANANG, BEVERLY H
PACULANANG, REXY H
PADAO, ANNA MAE A
PADAO, PHILIP BRYAN G
PADERANGA, GEM MARIE L
PADILLA, JROM
PAGALING, DALICAH DR
PAGE, MARICEL S
PAGLINAWAN, GEOREY E
PAGSUGUIRON, MAE E
PAHUAY, GEOGHEANNE GEBIL C
PALABRICA, ANTONIO II C
PALACAY, PATTI MAE L
PALOMARES, AVVA AÑEJ D
PAMINTUAN, DANA MICHELLE P
PANDI, MIRIAM E
PANGAN, JOLINA D
PAQUIAO, CHERRY LYN D
PARAGUYA, JOHN ADRIEL C
PAREJA, NOELAH JANE U
PARTOSA, JAY-ANN O
PASCUA, LAARNIE IVY E
PASIL, MOHAMED ZAYD P
PASOK, LUDICEL JR. Q
PASTORFIDE, KENNETH MARK R
PATAGOC, JANE LEINDEE B
PATARLAS, QUEENIE ROSE CLAIRE B
PAYURAN, THOMAS ROGER B
PEDREGOSA, TRICIA JANE S
PENALES, DIVINA KRISTINE R
PERALTA, REGINE MARIE F
PEREZ, ANTONIO III B
PEREÑA, REA JOY ST
PEROLINO, ERWIN S
PEÑALOZA, MAE CHARITY ANNE B
PEÑALOZA, REY DAWN T
PIALA, DIANA IRISH L
PINAR, FREDROSE MARK L
PINTASAN, ALDASHER A
PINUELA, HEIDEN C
PIOQUINTO, ASTRID CAROL V
PISAN, MARLON C
PLANTERAS, ROELAND A
POLINAR, MARIANNE S
POLIQUIT, JOSHUA ANDREI O
POLOG, ALIHASSAN U
PONCE, RYAN G
PORRAS, IVIE GAY M
PORRAS, RAVEN KYLE
PRAICO, RONNICK A
PRANZA, MA ERIKKA LOUISE P
PULA, RASHIN T
PULMANO, BLESS P
QUE, CHARL NYLAMAE L
QUIBAN, KEN JOSEF L
QUILO, DANAH DEE D
QUINTAS, SALVADOR JR. J
QUIZO, ZIFRA A
QUIÑO, MARK ANTHONY G
QUIÑONES, DEMZTER C
RABAGO, BERNIE R
RADJILUL, AL MOUIER HAMAD B
RAFOLS, JOSEPHINE T
RAMONES, ROEVEN JAMES H
RAMOS, CARLO ROBERTO J
RAMOS, RHUWAINE MAYES M
RASONABLE, KYLE VINCE O
RAZ, GRAZEL O
RAZ, SAMANTHA W
REALES, EVA CAMILLE O
REALIZA, MARIA RAISA M
REDOBLE, STEPHANIE R
REDONDO, QUEENIE JEAN A
REFUGIO, NEIL JOHN N
REGALADO, NICK MARIE P
REGENCIA, RIO M
RELUYA, LADY MAE C
REQUILME, JENNIFER P
REQUINA, JOHN MC LLOYD D
REQUISO, RIZILE C
REVANTAD, IRNEIL BONN P
REVELO, PRINCESS E
REVILLA, LEANNE JOY T
REVILLAS, CHLOIE MARIZ A
REYES, IDNAR A
REYES, JUNE CARLO F
ROA, CHEENEY B
ROA, LEONARD JAMES T
RODA, KEN JASON J
RODA, MARK ROED E
ROJAS, WILLEN P
ROJO, CHRISTIAN M
ROLDAN, HAIRUN-MINA G
ROMAGUERA, ANTHONY M
RUANO, RHIANNA MAE B
RUBI, MARIFEL P
RUIZ, DANIELLE MARIE B
RUSIANA, RICALIZA F
RUSSEL, REYMART M
RUSTE, ALYSSA YVONNE P
RUSTE, MARIA CAMILLA T
SAAVEDRA, DANIELLE RHEA C
SAAVEDRA, RJ-CARL R
SABADO, JHON KAISHER M
SABANDAL, LATIP A
SABATE, JOANN H
SABIJON, ALEXIS D
SABRAN, LEIZEL T
SACMAR, ROY CZAR SILVYN P
SAGARIO, ANGEL HOPE C
SAGARIO, CHERRYL D
SAGARIO, WINSTON C
SAGRADO, RITCHIE G
SAKANDAL, SHER-YNA S
SALAHUDDIN, FAHMEER H
SALASAYO, IAN VINCENT B
SALAVAREZ, RENZEL B
SALDAVIA, JOEMAR B
SALENGA, JORICH VINCENT A
SALI, ADAM S
SALIG, RONIELYN C
SALVA, NOLI P
SAMIR, NURANA S
SAMSON, AIFE MAE C
SANCHEZ, AGUSTIN JR. B
SANCHEZ, ANGEL MAE
SANICO, LOVELYN T
SANSON, KIMBERLY A
SANTIAGO, ERVICK ANTHONY E
SANTOS, BENJIE C
SANTOS, KIM T
SANTOS, MARY LOISE C
SAPAL, ZAID MOHAMMAD HAFIZ A
SAPPAYANI, PRINCESS MARIE E
SARIO, DANIA A
SARIO, FATIMA SHAMS L
SAROMINES, JOMARIE M
SATORRE, NIKKA J
SAWADI, ALHASAN A
SAYTAS, DALLET JANE C
SECHICO, KIEMER TERRENCE R
SEE, TIFFANY JADE C
SELDA, KIMBERLY GAIL A
SEMERGIDO, EMIL JUSTIN B
SERACARPIO, IAN FRINZ S
SIMPAL, SHAHADDIN T
SINON, APPLE GRACE S
SIPE, JERICO EARL H
SISMOAN, ELI ASHIR O
SISON, GERALDINE D
SOLIS, DEZZA LEE S
SOON, MARIE NENETTE M
SOTTO, ANGELLA KIESHA L
SUASULA, MARY ROSE R
SUMALPONG, GIL M
SUMIGUIN, LEAH MAE B
SY, NEIL CAIRO C
TABACOLDE, EDMARIE P
TABILIRAN, JOANNE MAE J
TABLATE, KYLE MARGIE A
TADIFA, MARY NIMRHODE B
TAGAPAN, PHILIP RABIN C
TAGLE, CHARISSE ANN C
TAHIL, MAT SALLEH U
TAJUL, RIDZMAHAL H
TALAP, ALHIANEL M
TALLODAR, JUNJIE S
TAMBULA, JEMIL LEE GAY C
TAN SANCHEZ, ARLEEN C
TAN, JOSE GABRIEL S
TANIO, JOSE REY J
TANOG, JOHARY M
TAPALES, DEVIN B
TARADJI, AL-MUDZRIN J
TAUP, MISCHA JADE SHELATINE V
TENIDO, BERNADETTE L
TESORO, KRISTAL JHEAN G
TIGMO, DIONNE GLACEL B
TIMBASAL, JESSA ADAWIYA W
TIMBASAL, SHANIA N
TIMOL, ALLICETINE JEANNE A
TOLEDO, MISRAEL L
TOLO, MARIO ELMER JR. V
TOMACLAS, LUDIGEN C
TORRES, ELMER DAVE O
TORRION, VOLTAIRE B
TUBAN, VINCENT JOSEPH
TUBERA, SYRONE PHERVEN M
TUBLE, SHERWIN A
TUPAS, MAE C
TUSIT, ELIEZA S
UGSOD, ARIANNE GERRIE S
UNDALI, MANUEL W
UNGGANG, AL-KHALID O
URSAIZ, PRINCES GAY M
USMAN, JAERAMARGA U
USMAN, LACSON JR. F
VALDEZ, CARL RYAN E
VALENCIA, LESHIERY V
VALLECER, CHELZ BRITNEY C
VALLECER, VON LESTER B
VALLIDO, CHRISTIAN RACHEL DS
VALMONTE, THEA MARIE DOMINIQUE C
VELASCO, THALIA ADELA ANN S
VERAJUELA, LOREN S
VICENTE, GERALD GLEN S
VILLA, JOHN PETER Y
VILLA, MARIA LARISSA LYNE A
VILLANO, RICHARD CHRISTIAN A
VILLANUEVA, CATHERYN R
VILLANUEVA, MC CHARBY C
VILLAREAL, ANDRE BONNE FELIPE L
VILLARIAZA, KEANNU A
VILLARIMO, NANCY S
VILLAVICENCIO, JESSA MAE L
VINGNO, JIMMY OLIVER P
VIPINOSA, JUNE G
VISITACION, NICA FRANZ C
WAHAB, AZANAN T
WALLACE, NURMINA M
WEE, ANGELIE NIKA A
YANGAO, JESSA G
YAP, EDNALYN T
YAP, JOHN IVERSON C
YBANEZ, IAN KENNETH T
YCOT, MARYJOY P
YUSOP, MATTSALLEH S
ZABALA, MARIA VERONICA O
ZAPANTA, JOSELITO REX C
ZOSOBRADO, LINDY LOU M
Note: The links below will become active as soon as the result of the examination is made available.
Professional Level | Complete list of passers
National Capital Region (NCR)
Cordillera Administrative Region (CAR)
CARAGA
Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM)
Region 1
Region 2
Region 3
Region 4
Region 5
Region 6
Region 7
Region 8
Region 9
Region 10
Region 11
Region 12
Subprofessional Level | Complete list of passers
National Capital Region (NCR)
Cordillera Administrative Region (CAR)
CARAGA
Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM)
Region 1
Region 2
Region 3
Region 4
Region 5
Region 6
Region 7
Region 8
Region 9
Region 10
Region 11
Region 12
This site will also list down the following:
List of successful exam takers
Top 10 passers
And much more related information with regards to the Civil Service Exam Results in August 2019
Ad
On August 4, 2019 PRC has conducted its examination in the following testing centers:
National Capital Region (Metro Manila)
Cordillera Administrative Region (CAR) CARAGA
Autonomous Region of Muslim Mindanao (ARMM)
Ilocos Region
Cagayan Valley
Central Luzon
Southern Tagalog Region (MIMAROPA/ CALABARZON)
Bicol Region
Western Visayas
Central Visayas
Eastern Visayas
Zamboanga Peninsula
Northern Mindanao
Davao Region
SOCCSKSARGEN
Exam Coverage And Schedule
Here is the exam coverage for both Prof and Subprof levels:
Professional Level (Prof) – In English and Filipino
Numerical Ability (Basic Operations; Word Problems)
Analytical Ability (Word Association – identifying assumptions and conclusions; Logic; Data Interpretation)
Verbal Ability (Grammar and Correct Usage; Vocabulary; Paragraph Organization; Reading Comprehension)
General Information (Philippine Constitution, Code of Conduct and Ethical Standards for Public Officials and Employees RA No. 6713, Peace and Human Rights Issues and Concepts, Environment Management and Protection)
SubProfessional Level (SubProf) – In English and Filipino
Numerical Ability (Basic Operations; Word Problems)
Clerical Ability (Filing; Spelling)
Verbal Ability (Grammar and Correct Usage; Vocabulary; Paragraph Organization; Reading Comprehension)
General Information (Philippine Constitution, Code of Conduct and Ethical Standards for Public Officials and Employees RA No. 6713, Peace and Human Rights Issues and Concepts, Environment Management and Protection)
Exam result release date:
The Civil Service Exam (CES) result is expected to be released (60) 60 days after the last day of the examination or on October 1-3, 2019.
The post Civil Service Exam (CSE) Results August 2019 (Professional) | Region 9 List Of Passers appeared first on Nulled Corner.
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