World-class

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    IT WAS the fourth place finish of the Honorable Oscar Samson Rodriguez in the 2004 World Mayor Prize that initiated  into the local consciousness the title “world class.”  The sheen of such global feat of excellence naturally  reflecting on the City of San Fernando,  thence dubbed world-class city. And everything therein soon upsized to the  over-the-top label. 

    The pedestrian overpass along the once Gapan-San Fernando-Olongapo Road, now Jose Abad     Santos Avenue, made of steel, fiberglass and plastic and not of the usual concrete and cinder blocks, hailed   as worldclass. The city transport terminal, also along JASA, tagged world-class at the time of the  Rodriguez  mayorship, now sadly fallen into noclass  disuse.

    The performances staged by the city theatre and choral groups, world-class, in the equally  world-class mini-amphitheatre of the worldclass Heroes Hall.  The Giant Lantern Festival   that draws in  thousands of tourists, mostly domestic, annually to the city – world-class. Ditto the Good Friday actual  crucifixion rites in Barangay San Pedro Cutud.

    To be fair, the propensity for world-class tagging is not  exclusive to the City of San Fernando. The North Luzon Expressway was instantly tagged world-class highway after  the Manny V. Pangilinan Group acquired its operations. Aye, it followed, rather preceded, that the man is one world-class businessman. To the Subic-Clark-Tarlac Expressway is appended a world-class status too.

    The roundabout  currently under construction at the junction of the MacArthur Highway andManuel Roxas Highway going  to the Clark Freeport is world-class, if only due to its primary purpose of facilitating transport of delegates to the APEC  meetings in January next year.

    Would you believe, the Clark International Airport tiny terminal had been hailed   worldclass too? This, after some obscure foreign magazine tagged the CIA as the “world’s best airport in a  special eco-zone.” Within the first two years of his return to  the mayorship of Angeles City, the Honorable Edgardo  Pamintuan landed eighth in the 2012 World Mayor Prize, fittingly earning accolades as world-class mayor.

    Thankfully,  as rightly, subsequent programs, projects and activities in Angeles City were not automatically labels   “world-class.” Just about the only thing tagged world-class in the city – and for the longest time now – is Fields Avenue. And the tagging comes not from home but from abroad, which makes it really authentic. “Original,” as the ace reporter Joey  Pavia is wont to say.

    Yeah, right. Fields Avenue is world-class – in notoriety. Hit Fields Avenue in the web and find another, but as correct a meaning to worldclass. Which makes us now really consider how world-class is defined:  “ranking among the foremost in the world; of an international standard of excellence; of the highest order; great, as in  importance, concern, or notoriety.”

    Rodriguez and Pamintuan, having been not only nominated and voted upon but appraised by some panel of judges prior to their being awarded runner-up finishes to the World Mayor Prize, are correctly considered as world-class. All the others, not even debatable, outright  disagreeable.

    The odiousness of   comparisons readily damn the NLEx and SCTEx vis-à-vis thoroughfares of Singapore and Malaysia. And we’re looking only around Southeast Asia here. Just wait for the completion of the elevator equipped pedestrian overpass fronting   Systems Plus school in Balibago and laugh at the worldclass pretensions of its JASA counterpart. Sneer and snicker  all the more with the escalatorfitted pedestrian overpasses in some cities of  Asia, Europe and America.

     World class performing talents, concededly, we have – in Lea Salonga. But not out of CSFP.  How compare for world-  classiness San Fernando’s Giant Lantern Fest with, say Rio’s Carnival, Bunol’s La Tomatina, Pamplona’s Running of the Bulls, Harbin Ice and Snow fest in China, Hong Kong’s Chinese New Year, not to include India’s Holi  festival?

    World-class has been loosely used, indeed misused and abused, hereabouts.  So, am I saying that it be totally stricken off the local lexicon? No. Only that it be qualified to be properly  contextualized, as in third-world class. So what prompted me to write about this? The writer Ram Mercado asking me how our world-class home city compare  with the places I roamed in Japan. Shameful 

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