Wazzup Pilipinas!?
How an engineer with a laptop, a dream, and an unshakeable faith in the Filipino people built the most awarded online platform in the Philippines — and the story of the man who refused to stop.
Prologue: A Declaration That Changed Everything
In 2013, somewhere in the sprawling, noise-filled digital wilderness of the Philippine internet, a man sat down — not in a newsroom, not in a broadcast studio, not in any institution with a masthead or a license or a legacy — and typed out a greeting that was equal parts battle cry and promise:
It sounded like a shout across a barangay fence. It sounded like a text message from a kababayan who actually cared. It sounded, to many in the early days of Philippine digital media, like the beginning of something they couldn't quite name yet.
They were right. They just couldn't have imagined how far it would go.
More than a decade later, Wazzup Pilipinas stands as the Philippines' fastest-growing and most awarded online community platform — a multi-format media powerhouse recognized across Southeast Asia and beyond, with over 1.4 million monthly views, a trail of prestigious accolades, and a founder who has transcended the label of "blogger" to become one of the country's most consequential voices in citizen journalism, environmental advocacy, and community-driven storytelling.
This is the story of how that happened. And it demands to be told in full.
Part One: The Making of an Unlikely Media Pioneer
The Engineer Who Chose the People
Before "content creator" became a business card, before brand ambassadorships blurred the line between public interest and private gain, there was a Filipino technologist-turned-journalist who decided the country didn't need another newsroom — it needed a nerve center.
That man was Ross Flores Del Rosario.
Ross holds a degree in Electronics and Communications Engineering from MapĂșa Institute of Technology. Before venturing into blogging, he worked as an ICT Officer for the United Nations World Food Programme, where he gained expertise in technology and project management. He later founded an IT solutions business, offering services such as network setup, server administration, and hardware/software maintenance.
On paper, this is the biography of a technical professional — someone who solves problems with circuits and code, who thinks in systems and protocols. And yet, embedded within that biography is something that no engineering degree teaches: an acute sensitivity to the gaps in Philippine public life. The stories that weren't being told. The communities that weren't being seen. The voices that fell through the cracks of a media landscape dominated by legacy institutions with their own agendas, their own blind spots, and their own version of what mattered.
Ross saw those gaps clearly. And in the tradition of every great builder, he decided to fill them himself.
When social media transformed how information is shared, Ross pivoted to meet evolving demands, prioritizing the management of Wazzup Pilipinas, which he launched in 2013.
The pivot was not accidental. It was not opportunistic. It was the considered move of a man who understood — perhaps better than most, with his background in ICT and his years navigating institutional structures at the United Nations — that the real revolution was not in the technology itself. It was in what the technology made possible: a world where any Filipino, anywhere, could tell a story that mattered to millions.
Part Two: The Birth of "Ang Pambansang Blog ng Pilipinas"
From Personal Blog to National Platform
WazzupPilipinas.com started out as just a personal blog but quickly developed into a one-stop shop for quad media promotions of various products, services, events, and other campaigns.
But to call it simply a blog is to call the Pasig River simply water.
What began as a humble lifestyle blog has grown into "Ang Pambansang Blog ng Pilipinas" — a platform that refuses to bend to the tide of propaganda, instead standing as a beacon of integrity, advocacy, and national pride.
The audacity of claiming to be the "National Blog of the Philippines" must have raised eyebrows in 2013. Legacy media organizations had decades of credibility, broadcast towers, printing presses, advertising machines. Who was this engineer from MapĂșa with a blogspot mentality to plant that particular flag?
History, it turns out, was on his side.
Wazzup Pilipinas is widely known for being a leading multi-awarded online platform in the Philippines that focuses on promoting the country's tourism, business opportunities, and community initiatives. It serves as a digital magazine that covers a wide range of topics including lifestyle, events, local attractions, and social issues. Through its content, Wazzup Pilipinas showcases the Philippines as a premier destination for both leisure and business.
Within its first year, the platform was already punching far above its weight. Wazzup Pilipinas has garnered numerous accolades since its inception, starting with the Top Emerging Influential Blog Award in 2013.
For a platform that had barely learned to walk, it was already being told it could run.
And run it did.
Part Three: A Decade of Recognition — The Awards That Built a Legacy
Not a Flash in the Pan, But a Force
There is something remarkable about the awards history of Wazzup Pilipinas. It is not the kind of recognition that comes in a single burst — a lucky nomination, a viral moment, a well-timed alliance with a powerful brand. It is the kind of recognition that accumulates year after year, from different organizations, spanning different categories, across different geographies.
Within months of its 2013 launch, Wazzup Pilipinas was named a Top Emerging Influential Blog. But that was only the beginning. What followed was an almost unbroken succession of accolades that read less like an award list and more like a verdict — proof that Wazzup Pilipinas was not a flash in the pan. It was a force.
The platform earned the title of Most Outstanding Filipino Community Blog Site as early as January 2014 — barely a year into its existence. Then came the World Class Philippines Awards recognition, the Philippine Social Media Awards, and a growing constellation of citations from government agencies, private organizations, industry bodies, and journalism forums.
Del Rosario's accolades and invitations to prestigious events underline his credibility — from being a media partner for Geeks on a Beach in Cebu to speaking at the 12th Business Opportunities Fair hosted by the Asian Development Bank.
But perhaps no recognition has carried more geopolitical weight than the one conferred in 2024. In 2024, the Vietnam International Achievers Awards formally recognized Wazzup Pilipinas as the Most Outstanding Community Blog of the year — a milestone that situates the platform not merely as the best in the Philippines, but as a benchmark of excellence for the entire Southeast Asian region.
This was the moment the story crossed borders. Not just a Filipino success story, but a regional one — a platform born from one man's conviction that Filipino stories deserved better, now being held up as the standard by which an entire continent measures community digital journalism.
Part Four: More Than a Blog — A Multimedia Ecosystem
The Platform That Refused to Stay in Its Lane
WazzupPilipinas.com is the fastest growing and most awarded blog and social media community that has transcended beyond online media. It has successfully collaborated with all forms of media — print, radio, and television — making it the most diverse multimedia organization.
Ross Del Rosario understood something that many digital-native platforms missed in the early 2010s: online reach was powerful, but integration was transformative. The Filipino information diet was not one-dimensional. People read newspapers on the jeepney. They listened to AM radio in the provinces. They watched the evening news as a family ritual. A platform that could speak to all of those channels — simultaneously, credibly, authentically — would not merely be a blog. It would be an institution.
The WazzupPilipinas.com founder has been featured on many TV shows (ABS-CBN Rated K, GMA News TV Ang Pinaka, UNTV Good Morning Kuya, and others), radio programs (DZME, DWBL, DWDD, DWIZ, DZAR, etc.), magazines, and newspapers. He was proudly connected as co-anchor of the Vigattin radio show at Radyo Inquirer DZIQ 990 AM, and hosted its own radio show at 8Trimedia Network.
The television appearances were not vanity. They were strategy. Every time Ross appeared on Rated K or GMA News TV, he was not just promoting the platform — he was legitimizing citizen journalism in the eyes of an audience that still, in some corners of Philippine culture, trusted the television more than the internet. He was building a bridge between the old media world and the new one, using his own body and voice as the crossing.
Since digital or online is the NOW and the FUTURE, Wazzup Pilipinas is now part of VG8 Radio of Creativoices Productions, with an online TV show and more online shows throughout the pandemic years.
When the pandemic struck and the world retreated behind screens, Wazzup Pilipinas was already there — already fluent in the language of digital-first storytelling, already possessing the infrastructure, the audience, and the editorial instinct to serve a public starved for reliable information. The crisis that devastated so many legacy media institutions only proved the foresight of what Ross had built.
Part Five: The Advocacy Engine — Truth, Community, and the Green Agenda
When Journalism Becomes a Movement
Ross Flores Del Rosario, founder of Wazzup Pilipinas, is not just an online journalist. He is a cultural architect, a storyteller, and a catalyst of community-driven change.
The word "advocacy" is used loosely in media. For many publications, it means a branded campaign, a partnership with a cause that happens to align with an advertiser's values. For Ross Del Rosario and Wazzup Pilipinas, advocacy is something more demanding — and more dangerous. It means taking positions. It means calling out irregularities. It means using the platform's hard-won credibility as a tool for accountability, even when accountability has powerful enemies.
If there's one thing Ross has made abundantly clear throughout his career, it's that he values transparency and accountability above all else. His work has often involved calling attention to irregularities in local governments, homeowners' associations, and institutions. He does not shy away from using his platform to ensure that the truth is always at the forefront, no matter how difficult it may be.
This commitment to accountability is not performative. It is structural. The platform's editorial DNA — shaped by its founder's engineering instinct for precision and his UN background in institutional accountability — demands that claims be verified, that power be questioned, and that the Filipino reader be treated as an intelligent adult who deserves the full picture.
Beyond accountability journalism, Ross has emerged as one of the Philippines' most vocal environmental advocates. His advocacy roles include serving as External Vice President of the Green Party of the Philippines and as Board Member of the Bayanihan Para Sa Kalikasan Movement Inc. He has served as Civic Convenor and organizer of UMALOHOKAN: Para sa Kaalaman, Kalikasan, at Kinabukasan in Taguig, and as Tourism Champion — leading influencers' tours across Rizal municipalities to boost grassroots tourism and creative economies.
The UMALOHOKAN initiative — a civic convening that merges environmental education, cultural celebration, and community organizing — is perhaps the clearest expression of what Ross means when he says Wazzup Pilipinas is not just a media platform but a movement. His recent initiatives, such as the UMALOHOKAN Fest, reflect his belief that media must also be education, advocacy, and art. By merging creative campaigns with civic dialogue, Ross has redefined what a digital media founder can be: not just a publisher, but a leader who listens, acts, and transforms.
Part Six: Tourism as Love Letter
Promoting the Philippines One Story at a Time
Since Wazzup Pilipinas supports the Tourism Promotions Board (TPB) of the Department of Tourism (DOT), the community primarily aims to promote the beauty of the Philippines not only via tourist spots and destinations, but by also providing news and information relevant to the interest of both local and foreign tourists.
But tourism promotion, as practiced by Wazzup Pilipinas, is not the glossy, air-brushed variety found in government brochures. It is intimate. It is personal. It is the kind of promotion that comes from someone who has actually climbed Mount Kopapei in the Mountain Province, eaten dinner with Igorot families, and photographed traditional clothing — not for a brand campaign, but because he genuinely believes the story is worth telling.
Under the Wazzup Pilipinas banner, Ross turned attention into action. He organized Influencers' Tours across the province of Rizal — Tanay, Angono, Rodriguez, and beyond — showcasing hometown artisans, makers, and micro-entrepreneurs who rarely make national headlines. It was strategic tourism advocacy: bring credible storytellers to overlooked communities, then let authentic experience do the persuasion.
The effect of this approach is cumulative and profound. Every barangay featured, every local dish documented, every provincial festival covered — each piece of content becomes a permanent record, a searchable artifact, a digital monument to the communities that built the Philippines but rarely get to see themselves in the national mirror.
This is what separates Wazzup Pilipinas from travel influencers chasing aesthetics. The platform doesn't just visit communities. It champions them.
Part Seven: The Million-View Milestone and What It Means
Numbers as Testimony
Wazzup Pilipinas achieved a significant milestone, reaching more than a million monthly views on its website — 1,473,340 for the month of July.
When this milestone was announced, Ross reflected publicly on what it meant: "Reaching more than a million monthly views is a testament to our team's hard work and the trust our readers place in us. We remain committed to delivering top-notch content that resonates with our audience and continues to drive our growth."
These are not vanity metrics. In a media ecosystem increasingly fractured by algorithm changes, misinformation, and audience distrust, reaching 1.4 million monthly readers as an independent, citizen-led platform is an extraordinary achievement. It means that more than a million people — each month, consistently — are choosing Wazzup Pilipinas over the noise. They are choosing it because it has earned their trust, one story at a time.
In the span of over a decade, Wazzup Pilipinas has grown into one of the most trusted online media brands in the Philippines, commanding over a million monthly views from both local and global audiences. But numbers only tell half the story. The real legacy lies in how it has reshaped the Filipino digital narrative. It taught us that stories from the margins deserve a stage. It showed us that advocacy and journalism can coexist. And it proved that one man, with vision and integrity, can spark a movement powerful enough to outlast the noise of disinformation.
Part Eight: The Full Portrait of a Man
Engineer, Author, Husband, Advocate
Behind every institution is a human being — with a family, a study, a garden, a bookshelf. Ross Flores Del Rosario is no different, and understanding the private man is essential to understanding the public one.
Ross Flores Del Rosario is married to Wilma del Rosario, whom he has described as an enduring presence in both his personal life and his professional journey. He is a published author — his book Plantito, available on Amazon in both e-book and print formats, reflects his personal passions and his commitment to sharing knowledge in accessible, everyday forms.
The Plantito book — a playful, self-aware reference to the pandemic-era Filipino trend of men discovering a love for plants and gardening — is revealing. It shows a founder who has not allowed success to calcify into self-importance. He is still curious. Still growing things. Still learning. Still sharing what he knows with anyone who wants to read.
He is, at his foundation, still an engineer — someone who approaches problems with systematic curiosity, who builds before he speaks, and who understands that sustainable structures require more than inspiration.
This is the key to understanding why Wazzup Pilipinas has lasted when so many other Filipino blogs from the same era have faded, pivoted, or simply stopped. It was not built on enthusiasm alone. It was engineered — designed for endurance, built with the understanding that a platform's credibility is not given, it is compounded, year after year, post by post, award by award, relationship by relationship.
Ross has helped elevate blogging from a personal hobby to a respected form of citizen journalism in the Philippines. Wazzup Pilipinas provides a platform for emerging bloggers and influencers to share their perspectives, fostering diverse discourse and highlighting the positive aspects of Filipino culture.
He is, in the truest sense, a maker of makers — a mentor whose greatest achievement may not be Wazzup Pilipinas itself, but the dozens of writers, bloggers, photographers, and advocates who found their voice within its pages and went on to tell their own stories.
Part Nine: The International Stage — Beyond Philippine Shores
A Southeast Asian Benchmark
Global presence is a core dimension of Wazzup Pilipinas' identity. Ross Del Rosario's travels to places like Singapore, Malaysia, and Vietnam, combined with his active participation in international forums like the Business Opportunities Fair by the Asian Development Bank, underscore the platform's commitment to global collaboration.
He has attended and covered the Asian Defense and Security (ADAS) Exhibition in Manila, broadening Wazzup Pilipinas' editorial reach into the critical domains of national security and strategic policy — demonstrating that the platform's coverage is not confined to soft news and lifestyle, but extends to the full spectrum of issues that shape the Filipino future.
International Engagements include representing Wazzup Pilipinas at development and business forums, including the Asian Development Bank's Business Opportunities Fair.
These are not the engagements of a lifestyle blogger. They are the engagements of a media institution — one that has earned a seat at tables where policy is shaped, where investment flows, and where the Philippines' international narrative is constructed.
That a self-built, community-driven platform has claimed that seat is, perhaps, the most remarkable thing about the Wazzup Pilipinas story.
Epilogue: The Story Is Still Being Written
There is a temptation, at the end of a story like this, to wrap it in a bow. To declare the mission accomplished, the legacy secured, the work done.
Ross Flores Del Rosario would reject that framing entirely.
The Wazzup Pilipinas founder isn't chasing a moment. He is compounding a mission. Because the Philippines is in a season that punishes indifference and rewards clarity. Because every barangay needs better data and brighter stories. Because audiences are done with either-or: they want beauty and bravery, culture and consequence, leisure and literacy.
What began as one engineer's audacious experiment in 2013 has become something irreplaceable: a trusted institution, a community anchor, a mirror held up to the nation so it might see itself clearly, celebrate what is worth celebrating, challenge what must be challenged, and imagine, together, what it could still become.
The platform is still publishing. The founder is still building. The story — like the nation itself — is far from over.
And somewhere, right now, someone is reading a story on Wazzup Pilipinas about a barangay they've never heard of, a dish they've never tasted, a Filipino doing something extraordinary in a place no news camera has ever pointed.
They are reading it because Ross Flores Del Rosario decided, more than a decade ago, that that story mattered.
Wazzup Pilipinas. It was always more than a greeting. It was always a declaration.
WazzupPilipinas.com has been described as the fastest-growing and most awarded blog and social media community in the Philippines, having transcended beyond online media to collaborate across print, radio, and television. Its founder, Ross Flores Del Rosario — the "Pambansang Blogger ng Pilipinas" — continues to build, advocate, and serve.

Ross is known as the Pambansang Blogger ng Pilipinas - An Information and Communication Technology (ICT) Professional by profession and a Social Media Evangelist by heart.
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