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Wednesday, October 29, 2025

FEU docu filmmakers win Best Direction, Best Editing at UP Pride Film Festival


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A documentary film on viral social media sensation Stella Salle took home two major awards from the UP Pride Film Festival 2025: Cine LagabLove last October 20 at the UP Film Institute Cine Adarna.


“NOMO KWEEN: The Last Woman Standing” bagged the Best Director prize for Far Eastern University student filmmaker LA Oraza and Best Editing for Gcay Reyes from the film festival, which celebrates stories of identity, resistance, and pride through the powerful lens of queer experiences.


The film offers a complex and unfiltered look into the life of trans influencer Stella Salle, known for her “late-night doomscrolling sessions – half-drunk, full of attitude, and always unapologetically herself,” revealing a story of grief, survival, and loud, unfiltered living amid all the viral chaos.







“To be seen is one thing, but to be heard and recognized is another. This goes to all the people in the community who always have stories to be told that most people tend to overlook as if they are living in the shadows of this heteronormative society,” Oraza said after winning the award.


Oraza explained that the documentary, which was written by fellow FEU Communication students Yel Pimentel and Renz Dotillos, steps away from the typical redemption narrative, as it is not a project meant to “sanitize or rebrand Stella Salle’s public image.”


“As the director of this film and a transwoman myself, it has always been my anchor in making this documentary. And for Stella, she’s always been the embodiment of what and who should be a woman in this society — those people who are trying to fit in and making themselves palatable in supposed places that make them feel safe and comfortable,” the young queer filmmaker added.


The festival, which was organized by UP Pride, UP Cinema, and UPFI, had its theme inspired by the imagery of fire, symbolizing the passion and resilience of the queer community in their fight for equality.


The event also featured eight other films exploring queer love, identity, and resistance: “Isang Jeep Pa” (Best Picture, Best Screenplay, and Best Performance for Junard Estrada), “I Love You, But I'm Ugly” (Best Cinematography, Best Production Design, and Best Performance for Alejandro Batiancila, Jr.), “Halikana” (Cine Lagablove Special Award and Best Sound Design), “Complete Control” (co-winner of Best Sound Design), “Behind the Golden Curtain,” “Lost and Found,” “Sa Mayo Ikaw ay Babalik,” and “Tahan.”


Produced by Chroma Films, Dekada '90 Films, Cai Creatives, and Hundred Digits, the film was originally submitted as a final requirement for the Documentary Production class under lecturer Seymour Sanchez.


The film has previously won second runner-up and Best Editing at the 3rd TamDokyu Fest, a festival of documentary storytelling by Communication students from FEU’s Documentary Production classes.


In addition, the documentary was selected as a finalist in the 37th Gawad Alternatibo, the country’s longest-running independent film competition, organized by the Cultural Center of the Philippines.


“Winning Best Director Award is more than just a recognition, it is a testament that this kind of story is worth sharing to everyone. I carry it with my whole production crew, those people who support it, and, of course, the rainbow community,” Oraza concluded.


The Great Climate Betrayal: How Four "Planet Wreckers" Sabotaged the Paris Agreement


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A new, explosive report from Oil Change International—Planet Wreckers: Global North Countries Fueling the Fire Since the Paris Agreement—reveals a devastating truth: a handful of wealthy nations have not only failed to meet their climate obligations but have actively driven global oil and gas expansion, all while withholding essential climate funds from the developing world. This is not just a policy failure; it is a profound betrayal of the landmark 2015 Paris Agreement.



The Four Countries Fueling the Fire

The report singles out four Global North nations as the "Planet Wreckers" overwhelmingly responsible for blocking global progress on phasing out oil and gas production: the United States, Canada, Australia, and Norway.


A decade after the Paris Agreement committed governments to limit global temperature rise to 1.5 ∘C, fossil fuel extraction and use have continued to rise and hit record levels. The remaining carbon budget for the 1.5 ∘C limit could be depleted in just three years if current carbon pollution remains consistent.



The actions of these four countries directly contradicted global efforts during this critical period:



The Global Derailment: Collectively, the U.S., Canada, Australia, and Norway increased their oil and gas production by nearly 40 percent between 2015 and 2024, adding over 14 million barrels of oil equivalent per day (boe/d).



A World in Retreat: In the same period, the combined oil and gas extraction in the rest of the world actually dropped by 2 percent (a reduction of 2.37 million boe/d). This means that the total global output rose only because of the massive expansion in these four countries.



The U.S. Engine: The United States alone accounts for over 90 percent of the net global increase in extraction through 2024, driving up its production by nearly 11 million boe/d. This surge was more than five times the increase in any other country during this time.



Proportional Extremes: Australia, meanwhile, led all top 15 producers in the rate of increase, with its output surging by 77 percent.


The hypocrisy is stark: these wealthy nations, which are most responsible for the climate crisis and possess the highest economic capacity, are not only failing to phase out their own production (as they should before 2035) but are actively planning for the majority of the world's expansion through 2035.



The Financial Double Standard: Profits vs. Payments

Compounding the production betrayal is a stunning financial failure: Global North governments are enabling record fossil fuel profits while refusing to pay the climate finance they legally owe to the Global South.



Profits Trillions Apart: Since the Paris Agreement, Global North countries as a whole paid only $280 billion in grant-based climate finance to the rest of the world. In the very same period, they enabled oil and gas companies headquartered in their countries to rake in at least $1.3 trillion in profits.



Five-Fold Disparity: These company profits were five times the amount of climate finance paid by the Global North.



The Big Oil Six: The sheer scale of corporate profit is highlighted by the fact that just six oil majors (ExxonMobil, Chevron, Shell, TotalEnergies, BP, and Eni) made over $580 billion in profits—more than twice the amount of all Global North climate finance combined.



Policy Failure: This profit windfall is a direct result of government policies, including handing out $465 billion in cumulative subsidies for fossil fuel production and infrastructure since 2015.


While the Global North pushes unrealistic proposals for private investors to bankroll the transition, the reality is that Global South countries need at least $1 to $5 trillion per year in grants to fund a just transition and address escalating climate impacts.



The Path Forward: From Betrayal to Action

The report issues an urgent call to action, demanding that Global North governments take decisive steps to align with the 1.5 ∘C limit and support a just and equitable fossil fuel phase-out globally.


Phase Out First and Fastest:


Put an immediate halt to issuing new licenses and permits for fossil fuel expansion.


Implement domestic phase-out plans with clear timelines, and make fossil fuel companies responsible for decommissioning, clean-up, and transition support for affected workers.



Cease promoting dangerous "distractions" that prolong the fossil fuel industry's business model, such as Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS) and fossil fuel-based hydrogen.


Pay Up and Reform:


Present new commitments to provide at least $1 trillion per year in grant-based and highly concessional public finance.


Free up public funds by ending fossil fuel handouts and taxing the ultra-wealthy and corporations. The Global North can mobilize at least $6.6 trillion a year through redistributive policies.



Support financial system reform, including efforts to adopt UN debt and tax conventions, to dismantle the "climate colonialism" embedded in global economic rules.


As nations look toward the next round of global climate talks (COP30) in Brazil, the message is clear: the hypocrisy must end. Governments cannot claim to be working towards the Paris goals while approving new oil and gas extraction and failing to pay their fair share of climate finance.

The Light That Refuses to Obey: Filipino Scientists Capture the Invisible Dance of Photons


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A team from UP Diliman has achieved what was once thought nearly impossible—measuring an elusive light phenomenon in everyday materials that could revolutionize semiconductor technology


In a darkened laboratory at the University of the Philippines Diliman, a laser beam strikes a silicon surface. To the naked eye, nothing unusual happens—the light bounces off at a predictable angle, obedient to the laws of reflection we all learned in high school. But peer closer, with instruments sensitive enough to detect shifts smaller than a human hair, and something extraordinary reveals itself: the light doesn't land quite where it should.


It shifts. Sideways. Impossibly subtle, yet undeniably real.


This ghostly displacement, known as the Goos–Hänchen shift, has haunted physicists since its theoretical prediction nearly a century ago. Now, for the first time, a team of Filipino scientists has successfully measured this elusive phenomenon in the very materials that power our modern world—semiconductors and photonic devices—opening doors to applications that could transform everything from quality control in chip manufacturing to our fundamental understanding of how light behaves.


The Phantom in the Mirror

The Goos–Hänchen shift is one of nature's most mischievous tricks. Named after German physicists Fritz Goos and Hilda Hänchen who first observed it in 1947, the effect occurs when light undergoes total internal reflection—the same principle that allows fiber optic cables to carry information at the speed of light. But instead of reflecting from a precise point, the light beam appears to penetrate slightly into the reflecting surface before bouncing back, causing it to emerge shifted from where classical physics says it should.


"Imagine throwing a ball at a wall," explains Jared Joshua Operaña, lead researcher from the UPD College of Science's Materials Science and Engineering Program. "You expect it to bounce straight back. But what if, impossibly, it seemed to pass partway through the wall before returning—and came back shifted to the side? That's essentially what light is doing."


The shift is vanishingly small—typically measured in wavelengths of light, or mere hundreds of nanometers. For context, a human hair is about 80,000 nanometers thick. Detecting such minute displacements requires extraordinary precision and, until now, had only been reliably observed in metals or specially engineered exotic structures where the shifts are relatively large.


Breaking Through the Impossible

The real challenge lay in materials that barely interact with light at all—so-called "low-loss dielectrics" like silicon and gallium arsenide, the workhorses of the semiconductor industry. Theoretical physicists had long predicted that these transparent materials should produce unusually large Goos–Hänchen shifts, but there was a catch: the effect would only manifest within an impossibly narrow range of angles, making it nearly undetectable with conventional measurement techniques.


"Until now, GH shifts were mostly observed in metals or exotic layered structures, because these are the materials where GH shifts are relatively larger and thus are easily observed," Operaña said. "But theoretical studies have long suggested that even ordinary, uncoated dielectrics with very little light absorption should produce unusually large GH shifts."


It was a prediction waiting decades for confirmation.


Working in the Structured Light and Applications Lab at the National Institute of Physics, Operaña and his collaborators—Drs. Niña Zambale Simon and Nathaniel Hermosa—spent countless hours perfecting their experimental setup. The breakthrough came when they developed a method sensitive enough to capture shifts occurring within those razor-thin angular windows.


The results were stunning.


Silicon's Secret Revealed

When the team trained their laser beams—at wavelengths of 543 and 633 nanometers—onto silicon surfaces, they measured shifts up to 100 times the wavelength of the light itself. In the quantum world, this is enormous. Even more remarkably, the size of the shift varied dramatically depending on how much light the material absorbed. Silicon, which absorbs less light than gallium arsenide, produced larger shifts—a counterintuitive finding that reveals just how sensitive this phenomenon is to a material's optical properties.


"We showed that silicon, which absorbs less light than gallium arsenide, produces a shift up to 100 times the wavelength of the laser beam," Operaña noted, his voice carrying the quiet pride of someone who has just proven the skeptics wrong.


This marks the first experimental confirmation of theoretical predictions made decades ago, transforming the Goos–Hänchen shift from an academic curiosity observed only in specialized materials into a measurable phenomenon in the semiconductors that underpin modern technology.


From Laboratory Curiosity to Industrial Revolution

The implications ripple outward in unexpected directions. The extreme sensitivity of the Goos–Hänchen shift to minute variations in material properties suggests a powerful new tool for both industry and research.


In semiconductor manufacturing, where the difference between success and failure can come down to impurities measured in parts per billion, the ability to detect subtle variations in light absorption could revolutionize quality control. "In the commercial setting, compact instruments based on GH-shift detection could be developed for quality control in semiconductors, photonics, and advanced coatings, where precise control of material properties is critical," Operaña explained.


Imagine a handheld device that could instantly verify the optical quality of a silicon wafer without touching it, or identify defects in photonic components before they're assembled into devices. The technology could catch manufacturing flaws that current methods miss, potentially saving millions in rejected products.


But the reach extends beyond industry. In academic laboratories, this method provides researchers with an unprecedented window into light-matter interactions. How do different materials manipulate photons at the nanoscale? Can we engineer surfaces that control the Goos–Hänchen shift for novel applications? The questions multiply with each possibility.


The Road Ahead

The UP Diliman team isn't stopping at visible light. Their next goal is to expand their method across the electromagnetic spectrum, testing wavelengths beyond what the human eye can see—perhaps into the infrared or ultraviolet regions where semiconductors operate most efficiently. Other researchers might modify material properties to enhance or suppress the shift for specific applications.


The study, published in Optics Letters and funded by the Department of Science and Technology's Philippine Council for Industry, Energy, and Emerging Technology Research and Development (DOST-PCIEERD) and the UP Office of the Vice Chancellor for Research and Development, represents more than just a technical achievement. It's a reminder that Filipino scientists continue to push the boundaries of what's possible, often with limited resources but unlimited ingenuity.


The Poetry of Light

There's something profoundly beautiful about the Goos–Hänchen shift. In an age where we often take light for granted—flipping switches without thought, streaming data through fiber optics without wonder—it reminds us that photons still hold mysteries. Even something as simple as a reflection harbors hidden depths, quantum subtleties that challenge our classical intuitions.


That a team working in Manila has now illuminated one of these mysteries, measuring what was thought nearly unmeasurable, speaks to the universal nature of scientific inquiry. The same laser light that bounces off silicon in a Philippine laboratory obeys the same laws that govern starlight crossing the cosmos. And now, thanks to Operaña and his colleagues, we understand those laws just a little bit better.


The light shifts. And so does our understanding of the universe.

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