ENTERTAINMENT MEDIA

 Entertainment Media

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          Entertainment Media Research specialises in proprietary research for the TV and Music industries. If you are launching a new artist, building an audience for a TV brand, programming a radio station or searching for the music sync to optimise your advert, EMR will provide the insights to help you make the right decisions.

We have over 10 years’ experience and use our proprietary quantitative methodologies combined with access to qualified user databases around the world to provide you with the most accurate data for your specific requirements.

EMR is the official music research provider to the BBC. We are proud to work with many great brands including Radio 1, Radio 2, Sony, Universal Music Group, L’Oreal, Mars, Pandora, Carlsberg and Red Bull.

With the rise of on demand TV, debundling of cable packages, increase of curation services, we expect a strong and continuous  increase in TV viewing. The High Quality of TV content builds communities and encourages engagement.

The human capacity for interaction is growing daily, the currency around this is trust. TV companies understand that a key element is an effective deep media strategy around programmes. Twitter is elementary in such a strategy.

Social Media has the potential to serve as the live platform to communicate with audiences before, during and after programmes. A social platform for content engagement can dramatically drive acquisition and activation of audiences and it is the ideal platform for audience referrals.  We know good content lives on and we want to talk about the great pieces of our time.

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(by:Lemuel Mejillano)

Social Media

Social media is the collective of online communications channels dedicated to community-based input, interaction, content-sharing and collaboration.

Websites and applications dedicated to Forums, Micro blogging,Social Networking, Social Bookmarking,Social Curation, and Wikis are among the different types of social media.

Here are some prominent examples of social media:

  • FaceBook is a popular free social networking website that allows registered users to create profiles, upload photos and video, send messages and keep in touch with friends, family and colleagues. According to statistics from the Nielsen Group, Internet users within the United States spend more time on Facebook than any other website.
  • Twitter is a free micro blogging service that allows registered members to broadcast short posts called tweets. Twitter members can broadcast tweets and follow other users’ tweets by using multiple platforms and devices.
  • Google+ (pronounced Google plus) is Google’s social networking project, designed to replicate the way people interact offline more closely than is the case in other social networking services. The project’s slogan is “Real-life sharing rethought for the web.”
  • Wikipedia is a free, open content online encyclopedia created through the collaborative effort of a community of users known as Wikipedians. Anyone registered on the site can create an article for publication; registration is not required to edit articles. Wikipedia was founded in January of 2001.
  • LinkedIn  is a social networking site designed specifically for the business community. The goal of the site is to allow registered members to establish and document networks of people they know and trust professionally.
  • Reddit is a social news website and forum where stories are socially curated and
    promoted by site members. The site is composed of hundreds of sub-communities, known as “subreddit’s.” Each subreddit has a specific topic such as technology, politics or music. Reddit site members, also known as, “redditors,” submit content which is then voted upon by other members. The goal is to send well-regarded stories to the top of the site’s main thread page.
  • Pinterest is a social curation website for sharing and categorizing images found online. Pinterest requires brief descriptions but the main focus of the site is visual. Clicking on an image will take you to the original source, so, for example, if you click on a picture of a pair of shoes, you might be taken to a site where you can purchase them. An image of blueberry pancakes might take you to the recipe; a picture of a whimsical birdhouse might take you to the instructions.

 

Brian Solis created the following social media chart, known as the conversation prism, to categorize social sites and services into various types of social media.

conversation prism - small

Social media is becoming an integral part of life online as social websites and applications proliferate. Most traditional online media include social components, such as comment fields for users. In business, social media is used to market products, promote brands, connect to current customers and foster new business.

Social Media Analytics is the practice of gathering data from blogs and social media websites and analyzing that data to make business decisions. The most common use of social media analytics is to mine Customer sentiment to support marketing and customer service activities.

Social media marketing (SMM) takes advantage of social networking to help a company increase brand exposure and broaden customer reach. The goal is usually to create content compelling enough that users will share it with their social networks.

One of the key components of SMM is social media optimization (SMO). Like search engine optimization (SEO), SMO is a strategy for drawing new and unique visitors to a website. SMO can be done two ways: by adding social media links to content such as RSS feeds and sharing buttons, or by promoting activity through social media via Status updates, tweets, or blog posts.

Social CRM(customer relationship marketing) can be a very powerful business tool. For example, establishing a Facebook page allows people who like your brand and the way you conduct business to Like your page, which creates a venue for communication, marketing and networking. Through social media sites, you can follow conversations about your brand for real-time market data and feedback.

From the customer’s perspective, social media makes it easy to tell a company and everyone else about their experiences with that company — whether those experiences are good or bad. The business can also respond very quickly to both positive and negative feedback, attend to customer problems and maintain, regain or rebuild customer confidence.

Enterprise social networking allows a company to connect individuals who share similar business interests or activities. Internally, social tools can help employees access information and resources they need to work together effectively and solve business problems. Externally, public social media platforms help an organization stay close to their customers and make it easier to conduct research that they can use to improve business processes and operations.

Social media is also often used for crowd sourcing. Customers can use social networking sites to offer ideas for future products or tweaks to current ones. In IT projects, crowdsourcing usually involves engaging and blending business and IT services from a mix of internal and external providers, sometimes with input from customers and/or the general public.

On the other hand, the integration of social media in the business world can also pose challenges. Social media policies are designed to set expectations for appropriate behavior and ensure that an employee’s posts will not expose the company to legal problems or public embarrassment. Such policies include directives for when an employee should identify himself as a representative of the company on a social networking website, as well as rules for what types of information can be shared.

(by: Aira Joy B. Rubin)

Gaming

League of Legends

League of Legends Worlds

‘League of Legends’ video game championship is like the World Cup, Super Bowl combined

Video game publisher Riot Games’ League of Legends World Championship remains the premiere eSports tournament.

Whalen Rozelle, director of eSports at Riot Games, says this October’s event—which over the years has taken place in Le Dock Pullman in Paris, SSE Arena Wembley in London, and Brussels Expo in Brusselsand—will culminate with an Oct. 31 world championship match at the Mercedes-Benz Arena in Berlin. The gaming event pits players from around the world against each other in the multiplayer video game League of Legends.

“The League of Legends World Championship (LCS) is like the Super Bowl and the World Cup rolled into one,” Rozelle says. “We have a very similar World Cup format because League of Legends is truly a global sport with most of the continents and many different countries represented. And the spectacle of the event is like the Super Bowl.”

Since forming the LCS series in 2012, Riot Games has seen its global online fan base explode. During last year’s 15-day event, fans around the world watched over 179 million hours of live eSports competition; that’s up from a total of 70 million hours of online live viewing in 2013.

Riot sold out 40,000 seats at Korea’s World Cup Sangam Stadium last year, but an additional 27 million people tuned in to watch a livestream of the final showdown between Samsung White (a Korean team sponsored by Samsung) and Royal Club (a Chinese video game league) as they battled for $1 million in prize money. The event proved extremely popular, boasting an average online view time of 67 minutes, — an important number that suggests fans liked what they saw and continued to watch the event for a long period of time.

“More fans watch League of Legends than any other eSport worldwide,” Stephanie Llamas, director of research and consumer insights at SuperData Research, says. “It also comes in second to Dota 2(another popular video game) for top total prize pool.”

Rozelle says Riot has fine-tuned LCS from year-to-year, listening to fans and pulling from real sports for inspiration. Its global league structure with multiple regions of play is similar to professional soccer, while the way it tells player and team stories through video packages is inspired by the Olympics. This year’s competition has been done “in the round” with players competing in the center of arenas—just like basketball or hockey.

Patrick Walker, vice president of insights and analytics at EEDAR, says Riot has done an excellent job of following the blueprint provided by traditional professional sports to create their eSports structure. Examples of this include providing weekly broadcasts with high production value and treating the rules of their sport with complete seriousness. They have a huge rulebook and treat rule infractions with the same seriousness of traditional sports.

League of Legends has 60 to 70 million monthly active users [who play the real-time video game] depending on the month,” Walker says. “The main effect of eSports is as key retention strategy to keep the number of active players consistently high. Much of the content released at this point by Riot, such as champion reworks, are designed to keep competitive players active rather than grow the player base significantly.”

Llamas says the fact that Riot sanctioned League of Legends tournaments through LCS has had a huge impact on the game’s success as a multiplayer online battle arena (MOBA) game and an eSport.

“First of all, they began supporting players financially, something that is pretty uncommon,” Llamas says. “Most players need to earn revenue through sponsorships or livestreams. This encouraged the best players to dedicate themselves to this game over others. Riot also put the full force of their marketing behind LCS even though it was a loss leader. Before LCS, League of Legends tournaments were organized via third parties, so it’s clearly something that was in demand, and Riot listened. This showed their players they were willing to invest in them and engage them on a higher level.”

Rozelle says Riot has kept its prize pool of $2.25 million steady on purpose, which is in stark contrast to the $18.4 million Valve awarded to the top Dota 2teams at The International Season 5 event this summer.

“We don’t want prize pools to be the main story,” Rozelle says. “Players should be making money from salaries and teams should be making money through sponsors. We want a strong ecosystem.”

Riot actively works with specific sponsors like Coca-Cola (CCE, +0.25%), American Express (AXP, +0.10%), Logitech G, and Plantronics, but it also steers companies to teams and players whenever it makes sense. Rozelle says one thing that has drastically changed over the past five years is an increase in the number of marketing executives who recognize eSports.

“In the beginning we used to have to explain what eSports was and now we have sponsors and brands coming directly to us,” Rozelle says. “We’ve also seen a shift in companies being more selective and trying to align directly with pro teams. We’re always talking to different companies and if they want to focus on a specific market or they have a smaller budget, we point them to good teams that fit their needs.”

(by: Ronin Paderes)

 Film or Movies

film, also called a moviemotion picturetheatrical film, or photo play, is a series of still images which, when shown on a screen, creates the illusion of moving images due to the phi phenomenon. This optical illusion causes the audience to perceive continuous motion between separate objects viewed rapidly in succession. The process of film making is both an art and an industry. A film is created by photographing actual scenes with a motion picture camera; by photographing drawings or miniature models using traditional animation techniques; by means of CGI and computer animation; or by a combination of some or all of these techniques and other visual effects.

The 10 most hyped movies of all time from www.tasteofcinema.com

10. Raiders of the Lost Ark

Not much has to be said to explain this one. Throw the director from Jaws and the director from Star Wars together, with a lead from the latter movie, and you’re bound to attract massive buzz.

This was the dream team of the generation. Steven Spielberg had created the summer blockbuster and followed it up with sci-fi classic Close Encounters of the Third Kind. George Lucas had sculpted the most popular movie of the 70’s, Star Wars, and American Graffiti was likely a classic-in-waiting itself. Throw in a franchise linchpin like Harrison Ford, a gifted writer like Lawrence Kasden (Empire Strikes Back), and a pioneering composer like John Williams, and fans couldn’t see how it could possibly fail.

Much in the same way Jaws promotions swept the nation, Spielberg and Paramount were able to do the same with Raiders despite the director having botched his latest film, 1941. And it paid off in spades. Beyond being nominated for eight Oscars, the film nearly doubled all its competition at the 1981 box office, despite Superman II coming out the very next weekend.

And Raiders barely dropped a dime second weekend when the Kal-El did come back.

 

9. Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Pt. 2

There’s been a tsunami of successful young adult books and films, primarily in the fantasy and sci-fi genres, since the beginning of Harry Potter. But nothing has yet to top this literary sensation that entrapped the youthful minds of an entire generation.

While we considered The Sorcerer’s Stone for this list, everything culminated with Deathly Hallows Pt. 2. Not only for a great film series, but for the most financially successful one in the fantasy genre. And besides, the audience for this J.K. Rowling creation had only grown since the late-90’s, and the influence of social media had grown right along with it. Between Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, and the announcement of the Pottermore site, Warner Bros. made an unprecedented online push with Part 2.

Even after the first part of Deathly Hallows had become one of the worst installments of the franchise, the final was all but guaranteed to break box office records. It shattered the opening night previews record with lines upon lines of teenagers. It not only had the biggest pre-sales of any movie, but also the biggest U.S. and U.K. weekends. It still holds the record for biggest July release, impressive considering how many blockbusters come out during this month.

There’d never been a YA movie series more obsessed over, and it may be decades before something matches it.

 

8. Jurassic Park

It was unlike anything anyone had ever seen. The look of the dinosaurs in Steven Spielberg’s Jurassic Park were to be one of the greatest visual advancements cinema had ever seen. Even compared to Terminator 2 from two years before, this seemed in a realm by itself.

Despite the fact Spielberg was coming off of Always and Hook, two of his less appreciated works, this was his most anticipated film in a dozen years. As the godfather of the blockbuster, this looked to be his return to form. Either way, people were going to show up in droves opening weekend. But many critics thought it to be so hyped there would be no way of matching such anticipation. Such was the life of the man who’d created Jaws, Raiders of the Lost Ark, and E.T.

To even casual moviegoers, this wasn’t merely a movie, but an event. Even in a time where the internet was not an effective marketing format, this film’s media barrage on the masses was nearly unprecedented. The promotional campaign cost $65M alone (about $110M present day), with all types of merchandise and cross-promotions with SEGA and Kellogg’s, among others.

And when it opened to the tune of $47M, nearly twice as much as any other film that year, it was one of the few movies on this list that came close to living up to insurmountable hype.

 

7. Batman

Though Superman brought the first major superhero movie to life, Batman was considered by some to be the “tent pole event” of their childhood.

Only Return of the Jedi and Raiders of the Lost Ark could come close to being a bigger film event in the 1980’s. 1989 set up as a crucial year for big-budget franchises, with Indiana Jones concluding (for now) and Back to the Future, Ghostbusters, and Lethal Weapon releasing their sequels. James Bond, Star Trek, and James Cameron (The Abyss) likewise had movies on-deck.

But Tim Burton was the hot new director after Beetlejuice the year before, and it’d been 23 years since the Adam West Batman’s campy take. There was candy shaped in the form of Michael Keaton’s head and kids supposedly wore black wherever they went, usually with the yellow bat on the front. It became a pop culture symbol more than a comic book icon. And they had Prince himself doing the Batman album.

It became a whirlwind of hype that wouldn’t come close to being matched by a superhero film until perhaps Spider-Man in 2002. If people only knew back then how regularly these movies would be overhyped in the 21st century.

 

6. Jaws

It’s the one that started it all: the grand-pappy of blockbusters.

The book had already been a best-seller, but that wasn’t going to be relied upon as the selling point. Instead, Universal started an unparalleled marketing push that had them hogging up television time and sending their cast all around America to promote the film. It may seem common by today’s standards, but its extent was a pretty novel idea back then.

Steven Spielberg was the up-and-comer getting all sorts of attention at the tender age of 27, being looked at as a great semblance to the old greats and likewise as a new breed of entertainer. But really, the movie monster was what many were most excited for. They’d seen Frankenstein’s monster, Dracula, King Kong, and Godzilla in recent years, but nothing was as realistic as this.

To explain how big of an opening Jaws had, consider this: It opened in 409 theaters in the U.S and Canada, while The Force Awakens opened to 4,154. Sure, TFA made it past $247M opening weekend and Jaws only made a little over $7M, but with inflation ($32M-plus), Jaws made almost $20,000 more per theater than The Force Awakens did.

Say what you will about theaters spreading audiences out, but the population sure wasn’t then what it is now. Jaws was the first summer blockbuster for a reason.

 

 

5. Titanic

Even though True Lies wasn’t held to the same standards as his other films, besides Piranha Part Two: The Spawning of course, audiences were clamoring for James Cameron’s next giant film. And with a $200M budget (about $305M today) that was unheard of 20 years ago, they expected the best-looking Cameron outing yet.

Pushing back the film from a July to a December release and bloating its budget only helped spread its awareness as Cameron attempted to make a colossal and excruciatingly detailed movie. It was Cameron’s dream project to do this film, and he spent five years working on it. The delays only furthered the buildup, which may not have happened had it been a lesser-known director. Even up against James Bond’s Tomorrow Never Dies with a December 19th release, nothing was going to damper its momentum.

A December release rarely had the same hype as a summer flick, where the biggest blockbusters like Jaws, Star Wars, Terminator 2, Jurassic Park, and others made their mark. But this magnificent and equally doomed ship and the fictional story (with rising star Leonardo DiCaprio) within it was too much for viewers to turn down around the holidays.

It became the most profitable movie (unadjusted) in history. That is until Cameron went to Pandora.

 

4. Avatar

Not many directors can boast the sort of success James Cameron has had. Not only had his last creation become the most profitable movie in history, but he also spent 13 years without releasing a movie. And that movie just so happened to be bringing brand-new technology to the screen in the biggest way.

Avatar promised adventure, the exploration of a vast and immersive new world. It promised us the look of enhanced motion capture technology, state-of-the-art software, and a view from groundbreaking 3D cameras. And it was coming to you via the guy who’d made Terminator, Terminator 2, Aliens, and Titanic. He’d delivered on the massive hype for the last of those three movies, so there was no reason to believe he wouldn’t this time around.

James Cameron himself was more into hyping the technology than he was the movie itself, as the first teaser for the film didn’t come out until August 2009, just four months before release. Compared to Star Wars or Marvel movies, that’s insanity.

The movie itself has been called dull, preachy, and overlong. But general audiences loved it enough around the world to make it the all-time box office champ. It also surpassed Titanic with the most unadjusted domestic earnings, something that’s only been trumped by The Force Awakens since.

 

3. The Avengers

Though the introductions of the X-Men and Spider-Man were the beginning of an era, and The Dark Knight trilogy gave a wonderful twist on the superhero genre, The Avengers was the pinnacle for many comic book fans.

Marvel’s readers and viewers had waited years for the assembling of their cornerstone characters, and they finally got everyone and thing they could want on-screen. Though Iron Man was the only well-established member up to that point, the openers for Captain America and Thor hadn’t been too shabby and fans seemed to be taking well to the casting of Mark Ruffalo as The Hulk.

Another huge selling point was bringing in Joss Whedon to direct, as he was already a fan-favorite for Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Firefly on television, the latter’s movie Serenity, and his previous line of X-Men comics.

The buildup had been going forever. There was a teaser for the Avengers at the end of Iron Man, and that happened four years before the actual movie was released. All that time in between was filled with rampant speculations and a hype not even Age of Ultron got anywhere near. And its possible neither Infinity War movie will either.

 

2. Star Wars Episode VII: The Force Awakens

It’d been a decade since Star Wars graced the screen. Despite the prequels being disgraced, the magic of the original trilogy still left fans in wait for a literal new hope.

Whether you believe it delivered on that or not, the Disney hype train was at full capacity. After they purchased LucasFilm for $4 billion in 2012, they promised as much Star Wars as the world could handle, with new releases scheduled for every year starting in 2015.

If there wasn’t enough Star Wars merchandise already, the lead up to The Force Awakens brought along hordes of it. And don’t even get started on where they advertised. Everything from Campbell’s Soup to Coffee Mate, Band-Aid’s to eyeliners all had Star Wars on them.

But because of how anticipated the movie was, exhaustion in its marketing could never overlap the awareness Disney was trying to build. Many people treated poster reveals like they were free four-course meals and trailer drops like they were holidays. All the favorite characters were back, there were new adventures to be had, and there was no Hayden Christensen or Jar-Jar Binks in sight.

And sure enough, opening weekend brought home the motherload for the Mouse House. It nearly grossed $250M opening weekend in the U.S. and Canada alone. It was the largest opening in domestic box office history and, at the time, the biggest worldwide.

 

1. Star Wars Episode I: The Phantom Menace

Star Wars was the greatest trilogy of all-time, with incredible worldbuilding, memorable characters, and intimate storytelling. Those films became a memorable experience for an entire generation of cinemagoers, and it defined an entire era of film that was broadening itself with groundbreaking directors.

And after 16 years on the shelf, Star Wars was back. The cultural phenomenon. The most popular series of movies in the history of movies. It was back with new stories to tell, and with George Lucas himself to tell them. We’d get Darth Vader, Obi-Wan, the Emperor, and Yoda’s past, among others. And there were all kinds of technological advancements that would help spice up the incredible sets Lucas was already capable of making. So you can at least understand why it was so hyped.

And then it was, to quote Obi-Wan, “as if millions of voices suddenly cried out in terror, and were suddenly silenced.” Yes, The Phantom Menace was for the most part a dumpster fire. But the lead-up to it was unlike anything cinema had ever seen.

Not only was there a 16-year wait for more Star Wars, but LucasFilm didn’t release the film until six years after they announced in Variety that they were doing the prequels. All the special editions were released in 1997 to kick off the next phase of the madness.

People flooded Toys R Us on May 3rd, 1999 for figurines. Star Wars Celebration went on in Colorado despite the Columbine shootings having happened there days beforehand. You couldn’t go to Pizza Hut without seeing Darth Maul on your Pepsi products. It was immoderate in its purest form, but it was incredible growing up in such a time.
Even if the movie sucked.

Honorable Mention: The Matrix: Reloaded

Lord of the Rings: Return of the King was capping off the greatest fantasy series of all-time. Finding Dory was scheduled to be Pixar’s next massive critical and box office hit. And Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl was nearly marketed to death.

But none of these financial giants could match the opening weekend hype and sales of the R-rated Matrix: Reloaded.

This was supposed to be the Star Wars original trilogy of its time. Seriously, go look at all the old message boards and see for yourself. The fanbase for 1999’s The Matrix was monstrous, one based upon the love for brand new concepts and a stylistic flair that was completely its own. In a time where Star Wars, Star Trek, Jurassic Park, and Planet of the Apes were disappointing sci-fi/fantasy fans, this Keanu Reeves-led franchise was something for them to hold on to for dear life.

Unfortunately, the film was middling at best, with lifeless dialogue, convoluted themes, and CGI worse than its predecessor four years before it. The Chicago Tribune went as far as to compare its hype and actual substance to the McRib, as “processed, not fresh, and masked with a secret sauce of special effects.”

After making $90 million-plus domestic opening, more than any other movie in 2003, the box office numbers plummeted immediately after. While the Matrix trilogy wouldn’t hit rock-bottom until Revolutions, this was the disappointing step backward that took the air out of the franchise.

 

I Guess that’s all about I can share in Movies branch of Entertainment Media

(by: Uy,Tyrone Philip A.)

 Music

Music is a form of art. Music is also a form of entertainment that puts sounds together in a way that people like or find interesting. Most music includes people singing with their voices or playing musical instruments, such as the piano, guitar, or drums.

The word music comes from the Greek word μουσική (mousike), which means “(art) of the Muses”. In Ancient Greece the Muses included the goddesses of music, poetry, art, and dance. Someone who makes music is known as a musician.

Trending music in 2017 POP Music 

” black beatles” a song by “Rae Sremmurd Featuring Gucci Mane” is in top 1 in trending music around the world

Image result for black beatles

 

the second best music is “despacito” performed and composed by “luis fonsi and daddy yankee.

Image result for despacito

 

The third best is “Bad and Boujee” Composed by “Migos Featuring Lil  Uzi Vert”. although it is in third it still has a catchy beet.

Image result for Bad And Boujee

And in the forth place we have “24K Magic” composed and performed by non other than “Bruno Mars”Though 24k Magic is shorter than any Stooges record, human Super Bowl halftime show Bruno Mars still wears a lot of hats: giddy uptown-funk savant, bumping-and-grinding R&B time-traveler, Ashford & Simpson–esque quiet-storm balladeer.

Image result for 24K Magic

 

And in fifth place we have “Bad Thing’s” a song by Machine Gun Kelly x Camila Cabello.

Image result for bad things by machine gun kelly

 

(By: Niño Marquez)

 

                                                 SPORTS

        Sport (British English) or sports (American English) includes all   forms of competitive physical activity or games which,[1]through casual or organised     participation, aim to use, maintain or improve physical ability and skills while providing enjoyment to participants, and in some cases, entertainment for spectators.

 

What is the trending sports this 2017

 

                                   Some of the trending sports  in 2017  is “basketball”: One  (1) of the best games is the NBA playoffs because the leading two (2) teams (Golden state warriors and the cleveland cavaliers)  in NBA is head to head in the last tree (3) years but  ended in game four (4) with the golden states win with there new player “Kevin durant” they push their win with the score of  “126 in forth quarter of game  4”,and the wholeworld watch as the golden state warriors win the long awated battle for the champion ship.\

Image result for golden state warriors score 2017Image result for NBA

 

And the next trending sports is “soccer”: here are some news about it.

: Diego Costa will miss Chelsea’s trip to Swansea City next weekend after admitting a charge of improper conduct after his red card against Everton last month.

– Former Chelsea midfielder Frank Lampard has backed Antonio Conte to assume the reins at the Stamford Bridge club for next season.

– John Terry has gone to remarkable lengths to liven up the international break at Chelsea’s Cobham training ground — by pranking teammate Loic Remy.

-CS Herediano have defeated at HT/FT Limón FC in their last 3 encounters in the league.

-érez Zeledón,have won just 3 of their last 20 away matches in Primera División

Image result for trending soccer

 

(By: Arnel Regudo)

 

TRENDING TV SHOW’S IN THE PHILIPPINES

television program (British English: programme) is a segment of content intended for broadcast on over-the-air, cable television, or Internet television, other than a commercial, trailer, or any other segment of content not serving as attraction for viewership.

The new TV show in ABS-CBN is the “FPJ’S  Ang Probinsyano” Ang Probinsyano, officially FPJ’s Ang Probinsyano, is a 2015 Philippine action drama television series airing in ABS-CBN based on the 1997 Fernando Poe Jr. film of the same title, courtesy of FPJ Productions.

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The story revolves around the journey of twins Dominador “Ador” de Leon and Ricardo “Cardo” Dalisay, (both played by Coco Martin), who were separated from each other due to financial reasons, even as they followed the path of being police officers.

And their are  other TV show in ABS-CBN like “la luna sangre” La Luna Sangre is a 2017 Philippine horror-fantasy drama television series directed by Cathy Garcia-Molina, starring Kathryn Bernardo, Daniel Padilla, and Richard Gutierrez. It is the third installment of Lobo and the sequel to Imortal.

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And here is another trending TV show in ABS-CBN it is “wild flower” Wildflower is a 2017 Philippine revenge drama television series directed by Onat Diaz, starring Maja Salvador, leading an ensemble cast including Aiko Melendez, Sunshine Cruz, Joseph Marco, Tirso Cruz .

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(By: Juaquin Paul P. Reginio)

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