eat bulaga 5272011
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Tags : bulaga 5272011 |
Some good stuff just for you!
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| by : FlipBooth on May 27, 2011 |
| Categories: Pinoy Vids |
| Views : 682 |
| Comments :0 |
| Duration: 30:00 |
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Video Description for eat bulaga 5272011
eat bulaga is a noon-time variety show in the philippines produced by the television and production exponents inc (tape) of malou fagar and tony tuviera the program is the longest-running and most watched variety show on philippine television it also holds the philippine record of all-time number of live tv episodes (bulaga means quotsurprisequot in tagalog although it should not be taken as the literal translation of the word surprise its closest english equivalent is peek-a-boo eat is the transliteration of it the tagalog game-slang for quotlost (in the game)quot and eat was chosen because the show plays at lunch time) the show is broadcast from the new eastside studios at the gma broadway centrum in quezon city as of april 10 2010 it has a total of 9209 episodes since the day it started airing Brought to you by FlipBooth - The Pinoy Style Youtube
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Pakistan telecom authority aims to ban rude SMS messages Texters should learn to watch their language when they are in Pakistan, whose telecom watchdog is drafting a ban on rude SMS messages. Some 1,500 "rude" words from "flatulence" to "pocket pool" and "quickie" are on an initial list, UK's The Guardian reported. While admitting that Pakistan's constitution guaranteed free speech, the regulator told mobile phone companies that such freedom was "not unrestricted" under court rulings, The Guardian reported. It added they had obligations under their licences to prevent "obnoxious communication." Watchdog director Muhammad Talib Doger said in a letter to mobile phone firms that "the system should be implemented within seven days ... and a report submitted to PTA on monthly basis on the number of blocked SMSs." The list was attached to the letter, with 1,109 words and phrases in English to be banned and 586 in the national language, Urdu, a local tongue. But the report said the watchdog has yet to tackle obscenity in Pakistan's four main regional languages, including the raucous Punjabi. Despite being a less-developed country, mobile phones are used widely across society, even in remote villages in Pakistan. Mohammad Younis, a spokesman for the PTA, said the ban was "the result of numerous meetings and consultations with stakeholders" after consumers complained of receiving offensive text messages. He said the list was not finished and the authority would continue to add to it. "Nobody would like this happening to their young boy or girl," said Younis. Mobile operators expect the PTA to fine them for any banned words that get through, which means that they will have to cut the connection of customers who persistently try to send such messages. — TJD, GMA News
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