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All Rights Reserved 2004 BERNADETTE
SEMBRANO.COM
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The Philippine STAR
Sunday
Magazine
News & Other Things...
By Almond N. Aguila
Publication Date: [Sunday,
May 21, 2006]
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She was born to host a morning show. Like
"Today" veteran Katie Couric, her voice matches her face–light, feminine
and perennially smiling. On weekdays, Bernadette Sembrano appears on ABS-CBN’s
Magandang Umaga Pilipinas with enough sweet and merry to get us
through the day. So, when Bernadette suddenly mentions death towards the
end of the two-hour interview, her one-person audience is left stunned.
"Sometimes I feel like malapit na akong mamatay," she unexpectedly
admits without a tinge of sadness. "Seriously, lahat ng gusto ko
binibigay ng Diyos. We look at death as something scary. I’m sure, if
I knew I was dying tomorrow, I would be scared. But death is a part of
life di ba? By knowing and accepting that it will come, you
appreciate life more. You don’t try to avoid it but you cherish every
moment."
Her 30-year-old life has been quite an adventure. Most of its highlights
were unplanned and providential. To her advantage, she offered no
resistance.
Bernadette took up business administration at UP Diliman. Raised in a
family of bankers, the idea was almost automatic. There was no doubt she
had the brains to qualify for a demanding course. But earning that degree
was far from easy. Working with numbers was such a challenge that she
insists her college diploma is still her greatest achievement.
Ironically, five months into her training at the FarEast Bank, she
realized her passion lay elsewhere. That passion, Bernadette thought,
could be tapped by being a stock broker or a flight attendant.
Broadcasting was furthest from her mind. Then, her older brother suggested
she audition at IBC 13 as a news reader. It was that unceremoniously, in
1997, that she joined Philippine media.
Believing everything happens for a reason, Bernadette saw meaning even in
her lack of media training. "The nice thing about not having a mass comm
degree is the humility," she insists. "Alam mong you don’t know
anything kaya magpapa-kumbaba ka talaga. You know that yung mga
kasama mo know much more than you so you tend to absorb things from
them. Yun ang mentality ko when I entered the TV industry.
But, until now, I realize that it’s also smarter not to admit you know
everything because you learn more in the process."
One of the first things she discovered was her itch to do field work.
Though reading the news meant less stress, she craved the excitement of
being in the middle of unfolding events.
On this summer mid-morning, the re-telling of her life takes place in
Bound, a quaint little bookstore she co-owns with fellow National Union of
Journalists of the Philippines (NUJP) chairman and Philippine Graphic
editor-in-chief Inday Espina-Varona, NUJP secretary-general and New
York Times stringer Carlos "Caloy" Conde, NUJP officers May Rodriguez
and Rowena Carranza-Paraan.
Reading, she realized, is one of her passions. But li-ving is her greatest
passion. "I read a lot of books but nothing beats the experience of being
there. Para sa akin, iba yung binabasa mong dine-describe ang
isang bagay sa libro or sa dyaryo at iba din yung andun ka talaga at
nararamdaman mo ang pinagdadaanan ng mga tao. I love meeting people,
more the poor than the rich for some reason. Parang I’m just more
masa. None of my teachers developed this in me. Wala din kaming
family members na into charity. Baka I was born this way?"
she concludes.
Without knowing it, life was preparing her for an unusual calling.
Bernadette developed a concern for the urban poor at an early age. As a
young school girl, she was touched by the sight of street kids selling
flowers and cigarettes daily on her long commute from their home in
Fairview to the Angelicum Campus behind Sto. Domingo Church.
"Yun ang una kong exposure sa poverty," she shares. "You
know, to me, it’s still so surreal na napunta ako sa field na
ito. I keep thinking na there really is a reason kasi I
didn’t really have the background. Of course, I knew I liked writing and I
liked field work. But I really didn’t process it and tell myself I wanted
to be a broadcaster or a journalist. I always thank God that He led me
here. Apparently, this is the job I should be doing. It’s interesting
that, even in high school, I loved doing research. I even did a term paper
on street children. I think mataas talaga ang social consciousness
mo kapag taga Maynila ka. You really see poor kids in the streets.
So yun ang una among maiisip kapag mapag-usapan ang social
injustice."
During her time in UP, Bernadette again chose poverty as a topic for one
of her term papers. But it wasn’t until she was doing the news on TV that
she realized she could earn a living doing what she enjoyed the
most–uncovering stories about the poor.
It was unfortunate that IBC 13 was a humble station with only three news
crews. Thus, she had little hope for immediate assignments. Again, fate
didn’t fail her. Bernadette found herself inside the GMA 7 compound
accompanying her then boyfriend to a TV guesting on Mel and Jay.
During a casual conversation with host Jay Sonza, she learned the station
was in need of a news reader. Just like that, five short months into her
TV career, Bernadette auditioned for entry into one of the country’s
premier networks.
GMA 7 instantly hired her as a news reader for their hourly news breaks.
From the start, Bernadette said she preferred covering the news to reading
reports on air. Her boss, Marissa Flores, would later chide her for
volunteering to be a production assistant. This, she thought, was the
surest way to achieve her goal. But a news reader she remained until one
day when, without warning, she was told to do her first field report. The
story was about the day-after cleanup of the 1998 elections. That was
followed by other coverages. Her most unforgettable report was,
expectedly, about the tragic fire at the Asociacion de las Damas Filipinas
in Paco, Manila where young orphans and poor kids perished. Bernadette was
stationed at the morgue to interview families who were identifying bodies.
Soon enough, she ventured into writing and producing. Her debut stint was
with Brigada Siete–a project she sought out. Later, she would write
for Extra, Extra. Then, Nessa Valdellon tapped her to contribute
stories to Probe.
"In my life, as a journalist, the best experience I’ve had was working for
Probe. Cheche Lazaro is my mentor," she announces.
Even so, Bernadette had no role models for the next phase of her career.
GMA launched a new type of public service program entitled Wish Ko Lang
in 2002. She auditioned and became not only the show’s host but also a
real-life fairy godmother to countless viewers desperate for a better
life.
"I admit that Wish Ko Lang made me a household name. I became an
instant fairy godmother because of that show. Up until now, people call me
Wish Ko Lang and it surprises me really. The fairy godmother image
that GMA 7 built for me has stuck. Before, people used to approach me
asking for help. That doesn’t happen as much now since I’m no longer the
host of the show," she concedes. "But andun pa din ang impression
na madali akong lapitan. Ang naging pananaw ko before I left Wish,
which was crucial, somebody else can always host the show but whatever
goodness I want to give to the world should not end with Wish Ko Lang.
But, at that time, how could you let go of something like that? It was a
big, big decision to leave GMA and the show."
In September of 2003, Bernadette faced a crossroads in her career. A
controversial expose she did for The Probe Team created such a stir
that she felt compelled to cut ties with GMA 7. Refusing to say much more
about her former network, she stresses: "Of course, it was a difficult
time in my life. I invested a lot into my career. Even during holidays
like Christmas and weekends, if I’m told I need to cover a story I do it
because I loved my job. But one story can really change your life forever.
One moment in your life can change everything that you’ve planned."
Suddenly jobless, Bernadette considered helping street kids through NGO
work. Her media career, she thought, had come to an end.
One agonizing month of aimlessness kept her off the air. But, immediately
after she entertained offers made by ABS-CBN, she was back on TV. What
clinched the deal was the fact that the network already had a show for
her. Lukso ng Dugo, a documentary drama that aimed to bring
estranged family members together, was conceptualized with "someone like
Bernadette Sembrano" (decided upon through a survey of viewers) as host.
That image, of a broadcaster with a big heart, has stuck. Shows assigned
to her by ABS-CBN seem to fit in that mold. Some weeks ago, Bernadette
started hosting Nagmamahal Kapamilya on Tuesday nights. Touching
stories about OFW and their families are dramatized. "We also interview
OFWs in different countries but we don’t air these like travelogues. We
show the difficulties and trials our kababayans have to go through
while working abroad," she explains.
Bernadette is also seen regularly on Magandang Umaga Pilipinas on
week days and TV Patrol World every weekend. Occasionally, she
contributes stories as producer/reporter to The Correspondents.
"I’m glad I’m back to broadcast journalism," says the beaming host.
"Recently, I did a story for Correspondents about rural folk who
migrated to Manila. I chose a community in the pier area where people
lived in container vans. It was exhausting to do. As a person, hindi
ako sososyal-sosyal. I hope my work gives the rich an opportunity to
see the plight of the poor. When people started calling saying they wanted
to help, I felt convinced this was my job. More than anything, when I
write, I address the poor. I talk to the poor because I feel they need to
learn. Sila ang audience ko. I keep that in mind. But, when
I write, I end up reaching out to the rich as well. Yun ang maganda sa
trabaho namin."
Not too long ago, this broadcaster’s column started appearing weekly in
The Star’s Entertainment Section. This, she adds, allows her to reach
out to a different audience. Sharing photos and stories with her readers
has also drawn attention to her advocacies. With caution she qualifies:
"But, as I learn about certain things in life, I realize that more than
charity, I want people to become empowered. Public service should not mean
people depending on others. I think it should be about gaining
empowerment."
Her work days find her getting up at 4 am and turning in no later than 10
pm. But she denies all she does is work. Bernadette says she has time for
a private life (she is in a serious relationship with a non-showbiz
boyfriend) and other things (diving practically every Saturday at Anilao
and taking up the guitar and photography).
She has accepted that the bookstore is more like a hobby than a
money-making venture. That’s not to say her business degree has gone to
waste. Bernadette has ventured into building and selling town houses. In
the nick of time, she realized she was also meant to be an entrepreneur.
Naturally, more and more people ask when she plans to be a wife and
mother. Knowing that the turning points in her life come unexpectedly,
Bernadette sees no need to feel pressured. "I just turned 30 and I love…my
life. Everything is just so at peace. Even me as a person, hindi na ako
masyadong nara-rattle. There are just some things that you let go of.
Kung mas bata ka kasi lahat pinoproblema mo. There’s something good
about growing old which is being at peace with yourself. You accept that
you’re not a superwoman."
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