Manila, somewhere between Mumbai & Singapore in many ways.
More prentensions to Western "global" city than Mumbai (highways, chainstores, hamburgers and hollywood) but with plenty enough poverty, filth and an edge of voilence that place it closer to Mumbai than Singapore. Maybe its the lack of a safety net. Maybe Singapore gets away with it because it has no hinterland to draw in the poor and hopeful, unlike both Manila & Mumbai. Both those cities are the metropolis that looks both inwards and outwards of the nation. Both of those are the exotic, the pretence or hope of a better life - of money, of success, of a better life, a better life like the movies (bolly/holly)- the city of dreams for their country. Singapore's hinterland is Malaysia, a separate country since independence. It can manage the influx unlike almost every other city in the world (Hong Kong maybe but there it is the Governmant of the hinterland that wants to keep the status quo, without that support the leaks there are would turn into a flood). Maybe because of that flood of humanity, life seems much cheaper in both Mumbai and Manila than Singapore. Death is common, life is cheap.
Anyway, that opening took me along way from where I was going. My point was going to be about football. In this international, global village, interconnected world that I rent a space in from time to time, there is usually one constant. Not McDonalds, not Starbucks, not HSBC (though there is some ubiqity to those brands)but rather the omnipresence of football and in particular the English Premier League and the Champions League. Even in darkest, dingiest hotel rooms in China, I can flick through the TV channels and find a game from one of these on. Usually it doesn't matter what time of day. Sometimes it may be from the Copa America, African or Arabic games but it is always there. Constantly on.
Not in Manila. As I sit here Man U are playing Liverpool. This is possibly the biggest game in Singapore since the last big game, thousands will pack the bars/strrets around Stanley Quay to watch the game live (Liverpool and Man U are the most supported teams in the Island State)and it will attract 10s if not 100's of millions around the world. A similar number of millions of dollars will be wagered, globally on the outcome. From a few cents between mates or parent/child to hundred thousands by organised crime. Even in Cricket mad Mumbai, where I caught a bit of Australia losing to Sri Lanka, football is the second game.
But not here in the Philippines. Flick through the sports channels and the country betrays it history as an American "colony" or client state. Baseball, basketball, All star wrestling, American football.Some major league, some college, some local but all US sports, oh and in a nod to the rest of the world Formula 1. No football, no Man U Vs Liverpool. No drinks promo in the bar. Nothing.
Slight diversion here -
Guess maybe its the colonial thing. The Phillipines were a Spanish Colony until the end of the 19th century, when football was being spread by British workers around her neighbours in Europe (Spain, Italy, Portugal, by her sailors across the Empire and through the strong trading links with South America.The US fought Spain over the Philippines to free the Filipinos from the tyranny of Spanish rule and to replace it with "independence" (independence to be effectively the first "Banana Republic" once the real difficult, principled leaders had been dealt with - another story). So Spain was being introduced to football by British miners, sailors and steelworkers at the same time as trying to hold onto the remnants of a decaying empire. As the Philippines passed from Spanish (non-footballing) hegemony into that of the US, it basically missed out on the constant contact with Europe that would have brought it football. Instead it looked west to the US, to the sports played by the new non-colonial troopss that took over their islands - to Baseball, American Football and Basketball. That's the US legacy along with Jeepnies and the American language, the Spanish just left a few words and Catholicism. Sport and religion. Plenty enough to damn a country with.....
And back on track
Weird. And for once I feel slightly adrift. As if football is the global lingua Franca and no one speaks it here. Brings back the fact that I am just dipping in and out of these cities, and that there is more that separates me from them than binds us together. Losing one of those binds is enough to remind you of that. Alone, thousands of miles from home with dodgy air-con and a well-stocked (and untouched) minibar.
The things you think about.........
