Jun Lozada Tour: The Vanishing Roadshow
Tuesday, March 18, 2008
Have you ever wondered why the audiences in your campus tour has been vanishing very fast Jun?
Perhaps it is because your monotonous gripes are fast turning into tiresome clichés already. Whenever you got the chance, you blame Malacañang for every minuscule inconvenience you encounter – an antic that may have irritated your audience, and thus may be the reason why it has become sparser and more unsympathetic by the day.
A microphone fails, and you go, “May taga- Malacañang yata rito. Na-infiltrate tayo”. And you repeat that line in every other school gathering you go to. How many times have we heard that line on the evening newscasts? Sometimes I cannot help but suspect that the “failing microphone” is part of the script for your J. Lo Roadshow.
Your expected audience does not show up and you quip, “Siguro, tinakot ng taga-Malacañang kaya hindi nakarating dito”. Don’t you get it, Jun? The people are tired of your antics already.
How many times have we heard you say, “Aso ko na lang ang walang kaso”? I lost count already. A priest refuses to say mass in your traveling circus and you say, “Nadiktahan yan ng kanyang Obispo na tuta ng Malacañang”. Don’t you have anything more to say, Jun?
How was your trip to Iloilo? You boasted that even the bailiwick of your adversaries warmly welcomed you, but actually, only your organizers welcomed you at the airport. The city did not even know that you were there, until they saw you on the newscasts.
Your Bacolod excursion was a little better, but it was still a disappointment to you; I am sure. You get to attend one of your masses there, courtesy of the La Salle brothers, but the way you and Cory are using the holy mass as a platform for your political designs, gravely trivializes it, and may further alienate you from the religious sector and from the people.
I learned that you hurriedly left Cebu because you did not want to answer questions from your audience there, questions that could have cleared the way to your “search for truth”. If you do not want to listen to legitimate questions, then how can you expect your audience to listen to what you are claiming?
The almost empty gymnasium should jolt you back to your senses, Jun. People are tired of your stupid jokes. The more you joke, the faster you lose your credibility. You should have hired Amay Bisaya to do the joking. But then, he might steal your thunder and you don’t want that to happen.
Meanwhile, beckon your captive audience to catch the last legs of your circus, before it completely vanishes out of their consciousness.
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