Backyard Sessions: Two Decades Later, Still Playing
By Anjo Pallasigui Summer in Canada goes by fast. You blink and it’s already August. That’s why when the weather’s good, you make time for things that matter. Last weekend, we had a backyard jam. Nothing fancy. Just friends, a few guitars, and a small setup outside. Some of us have been playing together for […]
When the Distillery District Turned Filipino
By Anjo Pallasigui It was the kind of Toronto summer evening you wish you could bottle. Warm breeze, golden hour light, and music echoing off cobblestone streets. But for many of us there, it wasn’t just another weekend—it was a first. For the first time in its 14-year history, the Italian Contemporary Film Festival opened its stage […]
Rah Rah Razila: The Magic of Laughter and Balloons
By Anjo Pallasigui Before the costume, before the magic tricks, before the cheers — Rah Rah Razila was just a guy with clown white, a lipstick, and a borrowed eyeliner. He started back in Southern Leyte, doing magic shows for kids. His first talent fee? Five hundred pesos. A friend was the client. It wasn’t […]
Rosanna of Lui Skin Tech: From Dubai Dreams to Canadian Grit
By Anjo Pallasigui “Sarap mabuhay sa Canada, basta wala kang inaapakan.” That’s one of the first things Rosanna said during our interview — and that pretty much sums up her story. She’s the woman behind Lui Skin Tech, a small clinic in Ontario helping clients (mostly kababayans) feel confident in their skin without breaking the bank. […]
Beneath the Surface: Abraham Reyes and the Art of Hidden Stories
When you first see Abraham Reyes’ art, it’s easy to get lost in its beauty — rough rubies, wild pearls, queen wasps, crushed diamonds. But step closer, and you’ll discover what Tunog Tao uncovered: this isn’t just art. It’s a love letter to the Philippines, written in gems and relics, layered with history and identity. A collector […]
The Power Plant That Refused to Die: The Story of the Hearn
Every city has its ghosts — structures that refuse to leave, that linger like unsent letters from another era. In Toronto, one such ghost still stands, silent but unyielding: the Hearn Generating Station. Opened in 1951, Hearn was once a giant — one of the powerhouses that kept half of Toronto alive with electricity. Fueled […]
Toronto’s Wildest Homes: From 7 Feet Wide to 50,000 Square Feet
When Cherie Mercado-Santos set out to explore Toronto’s quirkiest and most iconic homes, she found herself standing in front of two extremes—a house so small it once went viral on Ellen, and another so massive it contains its own concert hall. Her first stop: Toronto’s smallest house. Built in 1912 by Arthur Weeden on a plot […]
Karlo of Square Box: Fighting with Heart, Not Just Fists
When Karlo took his first loss after 21 wins, it shook him. “It crushed me,” he admits. “I had to re-learn that losing is part of the game.” But that moment of pain became the foundation for something greater—Square Box Toronto, a gym he co-founded with two fellow fighters. Karlo didn’t grow up with access […]
Filbert Shoots on Film: A Beginner’s Dive into the World of Analog Photography
Filbert has always loved photography. But lately, he’s taken that love to the next level—by going backward. That’s right, he’s trading pixels for prints and diving into the nostalgic world of 35mm film photography. It all started with a few old cameras: a Konica C35 rangefinder from the 1970s, a Canon AF35M, and a special piece […]
I Am Canadian. And I Am Filipino.
In this spoken word piece from Anjology, Anjo delivers a proud, poetic declaration of identity—one that stands firmly in two worlds. He isn’t a lumberjack, doesn’t own a dogsled, and still doesn’t know how to skate. But he can brave a snowstorm, wait eight hours in the ER, and say “po” when ordering a double double. […]

