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2025-06-27 Β |Β β±οΈ 10:59 Β |Β ποΈ 104.3K views Β |Β π 7.8K likes Β |Β π¬ 2.7K comments
Pea launches a new current-events segment covering Philippine news that affects her foreign audience. The headliner is a sweeping privacy regulation from the National Privacy Commission that could cripple travel vlogging in the Philippines, followed by stories on rising Filipino-foreigner marriages, Filipino-American household income, and a disturbing animal adoption scam.
The National Privacy Commission (NPC) has released new regulations affecting anyone who uploads audiovisual content online, monetized or not β
- Covers any recording device: digital cameras, phones, GoPros, smartphones, even Google Glasses β Pea notes drones likely fall under it too even though they aren't specifically named
- Applies to anyone who creates, sends, receives, stores, or shares audiovisual recordings online
Three requirements for vloggers filming in public or semi-public places: β
- Must warn any specific person being filmed that they'll appear on camera and may be posted online
- Must maintain a privacy notice on all online platforms explaining how people who appear in footage can object or request takedown
- Must use available technology to mask/blur images of all bystanders, especially children and vulnerable individuals
Pea says the first two requirements are no big deal β she already gets permission from people she films directly β
- The third requirement is the one causing the uproar: every single person who wanders into frame must have their face blurred
- She points out the regulation says "especially children" but actually covers every person who incidentally appears
- The only blurring software she's seen can only handle one spot at a time β covering every face in a crowd would take hours
- Even if one-click technology existed, she asks whether viewers actually want to watch videos full of blurred faces
- Monetized vloggers must also now register with the NPC, per GMA News reporting
Pea addresses whether these are enforceable laws or just suggestions β
- She checked: the NPC does have enforcement authority, so even though the rules didn't pass through Congress, they carry legal weight
- While many Philippine rules go unenforced, she warns that trolls and haters will report even minor violations β several commenters have already gloated that her channel will "go down in flames"
Why the Philippines passed this regulation: β
- The obvious catalyst: a Russian vlogger named Vitali who made content humiliating random Filipinos
- Broader concern: people filming in slums and capturing images of children and vulnerable people without consent, whether for clicks or to highlight social problems
- Pea acknowledges the legitimate privacy concern β if someone says they don't want to be filmed, they should be left alone
How this hurts vloggers like Pea specifically: β
- She loves doing street interviews and walking the boulevard chatting with people β always respectfully and with permission β but now every passerby must be blurred
- Beach and tourist spot videos where she pans the camera to show the scenery now require every face blurred
- Compares it to the mask mandates during COVID: viewers hated the masks so much many refused to watch until they came off, and this is "even worse"
- Predicts the regulation will wipe out travel vlog channels and tourism-focused content, which actually benefits the Philippine economy β many viewers found the Philippines through exactly these kinds of videos
- Questions the fairness: major news outlets capture bystander images constantly on a much larger scale, and she suspects they'll be exempt β "in the Philippines, it's always the big guy who wins"
- Her plan: if she can't do interviews, film tourist spots, or basically film anything outside her studio where other people exist, she won't β at least not in the Philippines β and teases that she already has a plan, telling viewers to stay tuned
Filipino-foreigner marriages spiking 40% between 2021 and 2022 β
- 6,854 intermarriages in one year alone
- Majority with Americans, second place Australians, and surprisingly third place went to German men β Pea jokes "Filipinos must really like those sauerkrauts and their hot dogs"
- 10% involved Filipino men marrying Westerners, but no data on how many of those foreign spouses were also men
Filipino-Americans are one of the highest-earning ethnic groups in the US β
- Median household income of $115,000, per a publication called "Filipinos in the Six"
- Article credits cultural values, work ethic, and community approach to education and family
- Pea credits a "trick of math": average Filipino household is 4.1 people vs. 3.1 for the average American household, so total family income naturally skews higher β but adds "good on us anyway"
Animal welfare scam in the Philippines (story that "boils her blood") β
- Alliance of Animal Advocates discovered people posing as kind citizens wanting to adopt rescued cats and dogs, then feeding the animals to their reptiles
- Scammers sometimes adopt multiple animals and even accept money from desperate rescuers trying to rehome strays
- Even worse: some animals are slaughtered for human consumption β a Thai man adopted four dogs last year and ate all of them
- Pea urges vigilance: free dog pickups are like "turning your house into a fast food restaurant like McDermanman's or Bigle King" and hopes anyone who eats there "gets the Shih Tzus"