if you plan on coming here during the Christmas holidays, just book months ahead for your plane ticket. Most Filipinos abroad do that because they know tickets gets sold out quickly. Some content creators even did this recently since they found out about it, and we're expecting plenty of them coming here next month.
@athenstar1015 күн бұрын
I agree. And expect insanely long queues, so patience is a MUST. 😂
@NicoleDayag13 күн бұрын
Thank you for giving time for this video..❤
@letgod780817 күн бұрын
Thanks for your reaction! Merry Christmas!
@teresitasuiza927617 күн бұрын
Also, every December 31, we have Media Noche wherein we are awake at 12mn. There will be loud fireworks outside the houses. And after the fireworks die down (which usually take 15 mins. long), we would partake in a sumptous meal with all the family members. There are also shows on tv that starts from 10pm and do their countdown 10 seconds to 12mn. In these shows, they showcase their artists singing and dancing.
@MamaBearPartyShop18 күн бұрын
Philippines has the longest Christmas Holidays start from September and it last until the 6th of February the 3Kings celebration
@lifeover40withangie15 күн бұрын
we love Christmas🎄 its not just a day its a season.
@CalixtaThomas17 күн бұрын
Thank you
@vilmajones787717 күн бұрын
I miss those lanterns, and the christmas caroling.
@mhadz73917 күн бұрын
Experience Christmas and New Year in Philippines Richard.am sure you gonna like it
@edgarallen618117 күн бұрын
I miss Philippines,their Christmas is the best in the world and even their New Year,their fireworks last at least 40 min straight👍👌💖❤️🔥💓❤️🥰🇵🇭🌟💕
@candyyumi991017 күн бұрын
❤❤❤❤
@eda748617 күн бұрын
Those traditions are cery well enumerated😊😊 as for my family we always stay awake until 2am for the celebration. And it will continue when we wake up as long as its still dec 25..😂😂😂
@artesiningart496115 күн бұрын
🇵🇭 In the Philippines and for Filipinos and our culture and traditions for Christmas or the Christmas season (Filipino: Kapaskuhán/Kapaskuhan), especially for the religious majority who are majority Catholic Christians, among few to some other non-Catholics but also Christians, we're religiously or liturgically anticipating and preparing for the religious Christmas season or the Christmastide or Christide with the Christmas Day in it for an entire month or more, which is for four Sundays before Christmas Day itself in a religious and liturgical season called Advent, and with the Christmas season or the Christmastide or Christide lasting up to any of the days between January 2 to 8 depending on the year, or even up to the first Sunday following January 6, the first Sunday following January 2 to 5, or the first Monday following January 7 or 8, but the last one is already beyond the Christmas season or the Christmastide or Christide, religiously-speaking and liturgically-speaking. On the other hand, secularly or non-religiously and also commercially, we're celebrating, or at least mostly observing, anticipating and preparing for the secular or non-religious and also commercialized Christmas season proper, which is during the entire month of December or even immediately after November 1st (All Saints' Day) and November 2nd (All Souls' Day) (collectively called or referred to as the "Day/s of the Dead" or in Filipino and in other translations, versions or counterparts in Filipino and the other languages of the Philippines) and through December 25th and even up to January 1st or 2nd, from September 1st and all throughout the secular or non-religious and also commercialized Christmas season called the "Ber Months", which is what we collectively, secularly or non-religiously, and also commercially call the names of the months of the year in English that ends with the syllable '-ber' from September through December or from September 1st through December 31st (New Year's Eve or New Year's Day's Eve), and this secular or non-religious and also commercialized Christmas season sometimes extends days or weeks before September 1st in August for the anticipation and preparations for or before the "Ber Months", and also sometimes extends up to when or together with when the religious and liturgical Christmas season in January also ends, or even up to the third Sunday of January during the feast day of the Señor Santo Niño de Cebu (Lord Holy Child of Cebu, a Catholic Christian title for the Child Jesus Christ associated with a religious image of Him that is venerated [not worshipped] as miraculous by Filipino Catholic Christians). The Catholic Church religious leaders in the Philippines, and even other non-Catholic Christian religious leaders, discourage these secular or non-religious and also commercialized celebration, observance, anticipation and preparations on September 1st or before it all the way up to the first few days or weeks of January or even as long as up to the third Sunday of January, especially as a one or single, collective, secular or non-religious and also commercialized season, though, but Filipinos and even the religious majority who are majority Catholic Christians, among other non-Catholic Christians, still or continuously up to the present, celebrate, observe, anticipate, prepare and practice this or it, as together with, more than, or even only or solely and without the religious and liturgical one and just this secular or non-religious and also commercialized one, all depending on the person or the individual Catholic Christian or non-Catholic Christian.
@shysydney17 күн бұрын
the 100th day before christmas falls in september that's why we start in the BER months.
@brillobarba926117 күн бұрын
🤩🤩🤩
@josephinearimado522617 күн бұрын
Hi Richard Merry Christmas❤❤❤
@ArmakKun15 күн бұрын
daaang .. its christmas season again😅 im glad i only have a few godchildren😅
@Gemini0608117 күн бұрын
Watch how New Year's eve fireworks coz Philippines looks like in a war zone haha, though its a bit mellowed down now, it's still awesome.
@joansydneylucas650917 күн бұрын
go ahead and buy some Christmas lights and decorate your house now. make it the brightest in your village! ♥️♥️