Developed by Various Opening theme Pili Pinasby Gravity Country of origin Philippines First episode date 21 February 2016 Number of episodes 4 | Presented by Varies per leg Ending theme Pili Pinasby Gravity No. of episodes 4 (list of episodes) Final episode date 24 April 2016 | |
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Similar Harapan ng Bise, Kanta Pilipinas, Pilipinas Got Talent, Aksyon, Poor Señorita |
Pilipinas debates 2016
PiliPinas Debates 2016 is a debate series administered by the Commission on Elections (COMELEC) with the assistance of KBP (the Filipino broadcasters' association) in preparation for the May 9, 2016 general elections.
Contents
- Pilipinas debates 2016
- Replay pilipinas debates 2016 commercial free
- Broadcast and coverage
- Online media and the debates
- Ratings
- References
The first leg was held on February 21 at the Mini-Theater Building of the Capitol University in Cagayan de Oro. It aired on GMA Network and was simulcast on Super Radyo DZBB, RGMA stations and KBP-affiliated member radio stations nationwide (GMA is had been earlier as a "former" KBP member from 1970s/80s until the said network withdrew from its membership in year 2003). A live stream of the event was also made available. The Mindanao leg was moderated by Mike Enriquez and Jessica Soho of GMA Network and John Nery of inquirer.net.
The Visayas leg was aired simultaneously over TV5, AksyonTV, Bloomberg TV Philippines, Radyo5 92.3 News FM and KBP-affiliated member radio stations nationwide. Live streaming was also made available via news5.com.ph, bilangpilipino.com and YouTube. It was moderated by News5 chief Luchi Cruz-Valdez.
CNN Philippines hosted the Vice Presidential Debate last April 10, 2016. It was moderated by Pia Hontiveros and Pinky Webb.
The third and last leg of PiliPinas Debates 2016 was held on April 24 at the Student Plaza, University of Pangasinan in Dagupan. It aired simultaneously in SD and HD over ABS-CBN, ABS-CBN News Channel and SD over ABS-CBN Sports and Action, DZMM Radyo Patrol 630/TeleRadyo, ABS-CBN Regional stations, The Filipino Channel (for international viewers) and KBP-affiliated member radio stations nationwide. Live streaming was also made available via news.abs-cbn.com, tfc.tv (for international viewers), mb.com.ph, iWant TV, Sky On Demand (for SkyCable and Destiny Cable postpaid subscribers) and ABS-CBN News official YouTube channel. The Luzon leg was moderated by veteran anchors, Karen Davila and Tony Velasquez.
Replay pilipinas debates 2016 commercial free
Broadcast and coverage
In January 2016, the Commission on Elections confirmed that they would hold three presidential debates and one vice presidential debate. This will be the first time that the COMELEC will host debates since the 1992 elections, with ABC-5 as the host network (fresh from the launch of the recently restored broadcast network last February 21 of the same year, after a 20-year rest due to Martial Law).
The debates were branded as PiliPinas Debates 2016. The first word is a portmanteau of Pili, Filipino for "choose" and Pinas, shortcut for the Philippines in Filipino.
Online media and the debates
On February 19, 2016, Rappler sued COMELEC chairman Andres Bautista for “granting exclusive broadcasting and livestreaming rights to handpicked media partners" before the Supreme Court, not allowing online media to live stream the events. Rappler asked the high court to intervene to allow the debates to be streamed by more than one outlet.
The social service claimed that the memorandum of understanding excluded online media from covering and streaming the debate; Bautista countered, stating that Rappler was being unprofessional and that they should have read the contract they signed. Rappler countered by saying it had raised the issues with Bautista and signed the agreement, believing in good faith that COMELEC would resolve the issues. Rappler's lawyer, JJ Disini, said the process for selecting media outlets could have been more transparent; he also expressed concern that the state-owned PTV-4 network was excluded from the agreement.
Ratings
In the table below, the blue numbers represent the lowest ratings and the red numbers represent the highest ratings.