Pea brings together three young Filipinas β Fritzy (returning from a previous video, self-described future Miss Universe), Mika (aspiring journalist), and Angel (known for her singing voice) β in Dumaguete City for a panel discussion with questions submitted by Patreon members. This is Part 1 of a two-part series covering first impressions of foreigners, the "rich foreigner" assumption, interracial dating, skin color prejudice, tampo culture, age gap opinions, and how to properly approach a Filipina.
What's Covered β
How Filipinas describe foreigners in general
- Mika: foreigners are very direct and to the point β Filipino culture involves stages of shyness and slowly opening up, but foreigners skip all that and say things like "hi, I think you're pretty," which catches Filipinas off guard ("what happened to hello?")
- Angel: foreigners come across as confident, liberated, fun, and open-minded
- Notes that Dumaguete specifically was listed in Forbes magazine in 2018 as one of the best places to retire, so the city has a large percentage of older expats; younger foreigners (18-21) tend to travel to more well-known tourist spots instead
- Some foreigners come to Dumaguete for exchange programs at the local universities
The "chismis" (gossip) about foreigner boyfriends/husbands
- Mika says the word on the street is that marriages with foreigners are healthier than average Filipino marriages β foreigners are sweet, showy with affection (Valentine's cards, love letters), compared to the classic shy Filipino nature; Filipinas married to foreigners report feeling "very satisfied"
- Fritzy confirms through a friend: foreign boyfriends make a real effort to keep their partners happy
Do Filipinas assume all foreigners are rich?
- Mika's logic: traveling is expensive, so if a foreigner can afford to come to the Philippines, they have money by Filipino standards β but they might not be considered rich in their own country; the Philippine peso exchange rate makes their money go much further here
- Fritzy: she has foreign friends who consider themselves average or below average income at home, but by Philippine standards they'd be considered rich because of the different cost of living
- Angel: has a friend who works as a 7-Eleven cashier in the States who saved up money to come to the Philippines and spends freely on friends β the peso-to-dollar exchange makes modest American savings feel like a lot
Why foreigners come to the Philippines
- Fritzy: the country is welcoming and hospitable β foreigners she's met say Filipinos make them feel at home; also great scenery, natural resources, relaxation, and it's cheap compared to other countries
- Mika on whether they come for the women: "Yes, definitely" β the Philippines is known for delicious food "and our other delicacy may or may not be women"
Have they dated a foreigner?
- Fritzy: no β she chatted with one but friend-zoned him (Pea teases: "you friend-zoned him!")
- Mika: no β she believes she's "not their type" because she has Eurocentric features despite being Filipino; when foreigners see her they think "there's like ten of you where I'm from," so they go for her more traditionally Filipina-looking friends instead
- Angel: yes β rates the experience anywhere from 2 to 7 stars depending on the moment; foreigners were smart, adventurous, she made tons of memories meeting new people, they were confident and open-minded; the downside: "they're really busy so they don't have time for me" β and Filipinas are clingy
- Mika elaborates on the clingy stereotype: Filipinas want to know where you are, what you're doing, who you're with, when you'll be home; her foreign friends have confirmed this pattern
Open to dating a foreigner in the future?
- Mika: yes, if there's a genuine connection β nationality doesn't matter, connection comes first
- Fritzy: yes β "I'm all about the connection, the feelings" (gets visibly flustered/blushing during this answer, which the group teases her about)
- Pea jokes: "book your orders now, guys"
Were they ever pressured by family to date a foreigner?
- Angel: YES β her mom literally said "you need to date a blond guy with blue eyes so my grandchildren will have blue eyes" and be "guapa/guapo" (handsome/pretty); Angel told her mom "it depends who I fall in love with"
- Group consensus: Filipino-foreign mixed children are almost universally attractive β "I have never seen anybody with Filipina mixed genes who isn't attractive β it's like a sure formula"
- Fritzy: yes, family members have suggested it β foreigners are considered attractive for their eyes, skin, "their aura, their whole"
- Pea jokes about foreigners needing to "register their packages before coming" β "all shapes and sizes of packages are welcome, wrapped or unwrapped"
How they feel about Black Americans specifically
- Pea raises this because she gets asked "a million times" β when people say "foreigner" in the Philippines, they typically imagine white
- Fritzy: first word that comes to mind is "cool"
- Mika is honest about the prejudice among Filipino elders: her mother would likely say "no, because then my grandchildren will be very dark" β dark skin isn't welcomed in the Philippines despite Filipinos being naturally tan; white skin is glorified (evidenced by whitening products in every soap, lotion, and glutathione supplement)
- Mika says she'd date a Black American specifically to break that stigma
- On skin color preferences: Fritzy is morena and loves her skin the way it is; Mika avoids the sun not for color but to prevent aging; Angel avoids sun because of headaches and notes sunscreen is very expensive in the Philippines despite it being a tropical country β "it doesn't make sense"
Do Filipinas date foreigners for financial reasons or is there real love?
- Mika: some do, but that's true in any culture β finances are always part of relationships regardless of nationality; speaks for herself and pushes back hard on the stereotype: "not all of us are like that"; notes many Filipinas are hardworking and independent and will pay for your stuff or split the bill
- Angel: has family members married to foreigners where there's genuine mutual love
Are Filipinos materialistic?
- Fritzy: no β would rather spend time at the beach making memories than getting material gifts; "memories are always better than material things"
- Angel: "Filipinos love food β we appreciate food more than materials, we appreciate hugs more"
What foreigners don't understand about Filipinas
- Angel: language barriers β some Filipinas aren't fluent in English and foreigners sometimes expect them to be; but most Filipinos know some English, it's just accented or not perfectly fluent; Filipinas try very hard to be understood because they care about the relationship
- Mika: "tampo" or "pangalo" β the Filipino concept where, after a misunderstanding, the upset partner storms out or gives the silent treatment but actually expects to be pursued and wooed; "when we walk out and say 'don't touch me,' it actually means touch me β do the opposite"; "get out" means "come closer, hug me"
- Mika acknowledges tampo is childish sometimes but says "it's built in"
- Fritzy: the texting/communication gap β if a foreigner says "I'm busy, can't text much today," that's fine for him but the Filipina feels ignored ("it's lunchtime already, why isn't he texting me to eat my lunch?")
- The classic: "What's wrong?" "Nothing" β but there's definitely something
Thoughts on mixed couples with a 20-year age gap
- Mika: as long as the younger person is a consenting adult (18+), they're capable of making their own decisions; notes she's dating someone 10 years older and there IS culture shock β generational differences where they don't get each other's references
- Angel: finds mixed-age couples cute, thinks they'll "make cute babies"
- On whether it's always about financial security: Fritzy says financial security is a bonus but also important practically β "when a person only dates a guy for money and she is not happy, what is the point?"; group agrees money can't buy happiness
Best way for a foreigner to approach a Filipina
- Mika: meet at bars, parties, or through dating apps/websites β no stigma in meeting online in Dumaguete; when first talking to a Filipina, lead with respect ("hello, my name is..., you look really pretty"); also check if she's already with someone ("are you here with somebody?"); avoid the cringey zodiac sign pickup line
- Fritzy: approach can be online or in person, but it must be respectful β there's a clear line between approaches that feel safe and ones that "creep us out"; don't rush things; if online, introduce yourself properly
- Angel: don't be too forward β references memes about guys who skip hello and go straight to "you're so hot, send me pictures"; "what happened to hello, how are you?" β if you want someone genuine, be genuine yourself
Fun rapid-fire segment at the end
- If they saw an attractive guy showering naked through a fence: Mika would "linger to indulge then walk away really fast and pray β thank you Lord, I'm sorry"; Fritzy would "take her time, slowly but surely" (boyfriend or not); Angel says she'd walk away (acknowledges her boyfriend might be watching)
- Would you slap your boyfriend for 50,000 pesos (~$1,000 USD) without ever telling him why? Angel would do it and take him to dinner after; Mika would kiss him immediately after the slap so it just seems like "another Tuesday"; Fritzy is ready β "where's my boyfriend?"
- Would you eat a live cockroach for 25,000 pesos? Fritzy immediately: "Yes β I'm broke, I need money" without a second's hesitation