Preview

Summary Of Juan For All For Juan By Wally Bayaul

Powerful Essays
Open Document
Open Document
1214 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Summary Of Juan For All For Juan By Wally Bayaul
Clad in a simple blue shirt and a pair of dirty white shorts, Wally Bayola does not look like the highly acclaimed comedian who once had his career beaten to a pulp due to a sex controversy. He was sitting peacefully inside a room of a house in Caloocan City in Brgy. 87 Zone 8, where the day’s episode of Juan for All, All for Juan was going to be filmed. He looks different from his television self, or maybe because he was not fully made-up with the ludicrous Lola Nidora look. His brows were in the right place and no character wigs were involved; he was still sporting his trademark of being bald. Waiting patiently for the interview to begin, he was quiet — a trait that you would not expect from such a personality whose job is to make people burst with laughter. Joining him in the room was his co-host Paolo Ballesteros, and Kalyeserye star Maine “Yaya Dub” Mendoza.
Walter James “Wally” Bayola is one of the frontliners of the longest-running noontime show in the country, Eat Bulaga (EB). Known for previously working in an inseparable tandem with comedy veteran Jose Manalo, he is now a third of the trio running a segment called Juan for All, All for Juan, together with Paolo and Jose. The portion caters to the masses located in small barangays and isolated areas, where they provide financial
…show more content…
A few months after recovering from the damage, he appeared on Jose’s birthday episode as a surprise to his long-time friend. The reunion had left Wally into tears because he could not help feeling grateful for the second chance that he was given. “Nung lumabas ako wala namang mga comments,” he claimed, since he was not aware of, or at least he had not heard of any negative reactions regarding his return. Slowly, he started to make a name for himself again through his excellent portrayal of characters. He brought to life many ideas that were once only figments of the

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Powerful Essays

    Josie Mendez-Negrete’s novel, Las Hijas de Juan: Daughters Betrayed, is a very disturbing tale about brutal domestic abuse and incest. Negrete’s novel is an autobiography regarding experiences of incest in a working-class Mexican American family. It is Josie Mendez-Negrete’s story of how she, her siblings, and her mother survived years of violence and sexual abuse at the hands of her father. “Las Hijas de Juan" is told chronologically, from the time Mendez-Negrete was a child until she was a young adult trying, along with the rest of her family, to come to terms with her father 's brutal legacy. It is a upsetting story of abuse and shame compounded by cultural and linguistic isolation and a system of patriarchy that devalues the experiences of women and girls. At the same time, "Las Hijas de Juan" is an inspirational tale, filled with strong women and hard-won solace found in traditional Mexican cooking, songs, and storytelling.…

    • 1851 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    After reading the first pages of Gabriel Garcia Marquez’s, “One Hundred Years of Solitude” I can only imagine Jose Arcadio Buendia finding himself in trouble due to his stubbornness or perhaps him trading off his children in exchange for the Gypsies newest invention. The opening pages of the book entails how every year in March, Gypsies come into their village and show case inventions they found in their latest journey. So far, some of the inventions they have found were a magnet, a magnifying glass, an astrolabe, false teeth and Ice. Upon seeing these never before seen inventions, Jose Arcadio Buendia was determined to get ahold of these inventions no matter what the cost was, in one incident he even traded his dead father-in-law’s gold in…

    • 337 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Juan Castillo Morales also was known as Juan Soldado or Juan the soldier is a twenty-four-year-old, Mexican soldier who was executed and convicted of the murder and rape of Olga Camacho who is an eight-year-old girl that went to the supermarket to buy meat but never returned. Paul J. Vanderwood discusses Juan Soldado in very vivid detail in his book Juan Soldado: Rapist, Murderer, Martyr, Saint. Vanderwood title is very contradicting because is there any possible way to be described as a saint and a rapist? Or a murder and martyr? In his book, he goes into vivid detail about the 1938 rape case and how many believe that he had been wrongly accused. After Juan Soldado execution many begin to doubt his guilt and the evidence that the Mexican…

    • 182 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    In petty crimes written by Gary Soto gives readers a collection of stories about Mexican- American children growing up trying to find their place in a cruel world filled with gangs. These children are from central California, United States Of America. Where the weather is nice and warm with the sun shining bright above them. The protagonist consists of La Guera, and Mario. The antagonist is Laura, José Luis, and Norma.…

    • 323 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Another critic named George L. Cowgill, a professor at Brandeis University in Massachusetts, argued that Leon-Portilla’s use of sources mostly came from Sahagun’s Codex Florentino and other numerous native sources that fit well to create the Aztec account of the conquest of Mexico. Cowgill felt that Leon-Portilla’s book did a successful job in achieving its purpose of telling the story through the account of the natives and the overall story seemed to flow very well as a narrative. Cowgill felt Portilla’s book was a “convincing and moving presentation” of how the indigenous population and their descendants had to say about their cultural downfall. Leon-Portilla made the reader think of how the natives felt and what they endured with his vivid…

    • 796 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Many people have thoughts about different places and what they are going to be like. Like Pablo Medina a 12-year-old child that went to the united states and had an experience that was not as wonderful. In the memoir “Arrival: 1960” Medina came over from cube to start a fresh new life, Medina believed that life would change by moving countries. What hit him was experiences can have change on one's perspective of a bright, picturesque perception to a dark pessimism.…

    • 528 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    During the seventeenth century, the Spaniards and Portuguese traveled all the way to a different region to develop independence and new colonies. This region is named Central America, also known as Latin America. Central America portrays progress, independence and expanding cultures.…

    • 1325 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    “Do not be concerned about the future; keep your attention on today, and stay in the present moment. Just live one day at a time. Always do your best to keep these agreements, and soon it will be easy for you. Today is the beginning of a new dream.”…

    • 1247 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Fulgencio, el fotógrapho, roams the Mexican countryside, taking pictures. He misses the bus because he’d spent too much time cajoling doña Elvira Cantos. Yesterday, he’d photographed the famed masked wrestler El Santo without his mask, and plans to sell the photos to La Tribuna and become famous. He goes into a cantina for a drink when a hippie gringo, Jaime, offers him a ride. They leave in his Ford station wagon, filled with merchandise. Fulgencio offers to…

    • 2494 Words
    • 10 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    How Can The Lesson Learned From This Book Today: The lesson of leadership and independence can easily be used in everything you do on a day to day bases especially as a Marine. Every day you are assigned multiple tasks to do and being able to accomplish these tasks on your own will begin to get you recognition from your superiors. You will also use leadership if you are giving a task to supervise and make sure it gets done correctly by ensuring your fellow Marines know what the mission is and how to accomplish it.…

    • 338 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Through conversations and images relating to the characters and relationships throughout the film, Watt suggests that forming supportive and meaningful relationships with others can help us cope with personal catastrophe during life. We see this in the support given to Nick from his boss. Phil arrives at the cricket match, not to play, but to ask Nick “How you going?”…

    • 795 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    "Joyas Voladoras" is very beautiful, author Brian Doyle uses many poetic words to describe the movement of the humming bird and whale. He then mentions about how humming birds' hearts are fragile and weak, which they burn out their life in two years. He then moves on to talk about the biggest heart in the world, whales' hearts. Their hears are enormous, they beat very slowly and that is why they can live for over two hundred years. Afterwards, he moves on to the humans' heart. He says that all living things are very similar, we all at least have a heart which creates liquid motion inside our body. The heart starts beating from the moment a life was created and end when it reached its end. All the events happen during that life time is all…

    • 402 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    The essay “Our America” by Jose Marti is a magnificent work in which it encourage Latin America to realize that the human being is intelligent, wise and natural that tends to be mortified by the world. The world in this case North America and Europe, in their eagerness to conquer, they completely forget that Latin America is human beings of thought and ideals of our nature. Jose Marti tries to liberate Latin America from the oppression of the conquerors. He encourages to his people to understand that they are not a weak race, that they should be proud of who they are. So, that is why Marti encourages them to know their history and culture so they can rule it without imitating any other culture.…

    • 522 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Speech Outline

    • 869 Words
    • 4 Pages

    • Born on April 4, 1957, to a poor family in the rural town of La Tuna Badiraguato, his abusive father kicked him out of the house as a child. He started swelling oranges to feed himself. He's poorly educated, his formal education ended in third grade, and as an adult, he has reportedly struggled to read and write, prevailing upon a ghostwriter, at one point, to compose letters to his mistress.…

    • 869 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Bartolome de las Casas was born on November 11 1484 in Seville, Spain. He was a Spanish missionary who “participated in the conquest of Cuba.” (text pg 27) While in the Americas, he had owned enslaved Indian and shortly after “freed his own Indian slaves and began to preach against the injustices of Spanish Rule.” (text pg 27) Throughout his years he dedicated his life to being an advocate for Native American rights. In 1520 he tried, but failed, to establish a separate settlement where the Spanish farmers were equal to their Indian counterparts and then in 1523 he went on to write “History of the Indies” among other books and pamphlets that “denounced Spain for causing the death of millions of innocent people” and trying to gain freedom of the Native Americans. In 1540, Las Casas sought out to reform the…

    • 863 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays