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2023-12-22 Β |Β β±οΈ 20:24 Β |Β ποΈ 35.9K views Β |Β π 5.5K likes Β |Β π¬ 1.7K comments
Pea's annual Christmas special focuses all the channel's resources on a single family living in extreme isolation in the Philippine mountains. After hiking to their remote home and documenting their living conditions, she commissions and oversees the construction of a complete new house with three bedrooms, a bathroom, a kitchen, and solar power β then surprises the family with their new home plus Christmas presents.
Context and past Christmas specials β
- Previous years: handed out Christmas presents to kids who'd never had any, held a feast for a whole village, brought supplies to a school in need
- This year's approach: concentrate all resources on one family to not just give them a good Christmas but "actually change their lives"
- Pea heard about a family living deep in the mountains that "wasn't doing so well"
The hike to find the family β
- It had been pouring for days; clouds clung to the mountaintop; deep wet terrain made it a difficult trek
- No roads in the area, barely even paths in some places; rain makes the grass dangerously slippery with mud
- Pea explains why people live this far out: they have nowhere else to go β the land has been passed down through generations and is literally all they have
- Even in 2023, families live in "near total isolation"
- Pea jokes about being "sure-footed as a mountain goat" before arriving covered in dirt
Meeting the family β Ate Pasita and Kuya Pantoy β
- Mother: Pasita (Ate Pass), age 35
- Father: Pantoy (Kuya Pantoy), age 39
- Four boys: Vince Anton (14), Vincent Anthony (10), Junior (6), Kurt Neil (4)
- Living in this location since 2008
Their living conditions β devastating details β
- The house is described as "a metal box the size of a chicken coop" that fits all six of them
- Kitchen: inside the metal shack with an open fire; Pea asks if they're afraid the whole house could catch fire
- Sleeping: all six people sleep together in one tiny space β Pea counts "1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6" to confirm they all fit
- No bathroom/CR (comfort room) β they go "somewhere down the road" in the woods
- Water source: free mountain water piped from outside
- No electricity β they use a single flashlight; when it runs out, they go to sleep
- Nighttime entertainment: depends on whether the flashlight battery lasts β singing, telling stories, or just going to sleep
- Father works construction, earning approximately 1,000 pesos per week (about $20/week) β not enough to feed six people
- Eldest son walks TWO HOURS each way to school every day
- The family visits the city maybe once or twice a month if they have money β walk first, then catch a tricycle
- The children have NEVER been to a park or experienced the city
- On rainy days (like the day of filming), the family sits together reading the Bible, doing shapes and numbers with the kids for homeschooling
The promise β
- Pea asks the family if they believe in Santa β the kids, mom, and dad all say yes
- She tells them: "I think Santa could do something nice for you guys this year"
- Does a playful phone call to "Santa" asking him to greenlight the project
- Announces to the family that they're getting a brand-new home β the family is excited
The construction process β
- Pea drew up house plans, estimated materials, and had them delivered as close as possible (which "wasn't very close at all")
- Hired a crew of seven workers
- Every single piece of building supplies was carried by hand to the work site
- Worked almost every day for 3 weeks straight, nearly didn't make it due to constant rain
- Finished just before Christmas
The new house tour β
- Wraparound porch: Pea's personal favorite β "instagrammable" with a "million-dollar view" of mountain greenery; she imagines them sipping coffee in the morning
- Living room: cozy space for creating new memories, playing cards with the kids β their very first living room
- Two boys' bedrooms: bunk beds made from bamboo and weaved bamboo (local materials); Pea jokes about them "fighting over who gets the top bunk" and "talking about girls"
- Master bedroom for the parents: window for watching sunrise or sunset; Pea notes they finally get alone time and privacy ("having four boys can be a handful")
- Solar-powered radio with a light bulb β sustainable electricity for the first time
- Kitchen: a proper stove with propane tank so they no longer need to start a fire inside the metal shack; can still cook outside with firewood on sunny days; pots, pans, cooking supplies, and a pantry with a couple months' worth of food
- Bathroom: small but functional, hooked up to a real septic tank β "no more going in the woods and digging holes, especially in the middle of the night in the rain"
- Water piped directly from the mountain to the house
The family's reaction β
- The kids immediately explore their bedrooms and claim bunks
- Pea confirms with Ate Pasita that this is her first-ever bedroom β "first bedroom, first"
- Asks the parents if they're planning kid number five β both firmly say no
- Pea shows them the kitchen and bathroom; asks about Pasita's specialty dish (pancit and adobo)
Christmas presents β
- Bags and school supplies for the school-age kids
- Toys including swords β the kids are thrilled
- A large surprise gift left by "Santa" at the end (appears to be a bicycle from the family's excited reaction)
Closing thoughts β
- Pea acknowledges they "pulled it off" and made a huge difference but says the work isn't over β they still need to help the family find ways to better support themselves going forward
- Updates to be posted on her Patreon channel
- Thanks the viewers directly: "Without whose support none of this would have been possible"
- Teases a Part 2 holiday video coming on Tuesday, "surprising someone who thought their luck had run out"