Poging GOUD - Vrij

Scrambling To Survive

Time

|

June 23, 2025

FILIPINO FISHING FAMILIES CONFRONT THE WORLD'S CHANGING RELATIONSHIP WITH THE SEA

- CHARLIE CAMPBELL AND CHAD DE GUZMAN | THE PHILIPPINES

Scrambling To Survive

Traditional fishing boats in Aurora province, which was hit by Typhoon Man-yi

That’s when her husband Marionito’s boat appears on the shimmering horizon of the Pacific. By the time his skiff has been hauled onto the shingle beach, it’s already clear whether his toil has been profitable. Today was not: just eight small sardines and mackerel from five hours casting handlines at sea. “Almost nothing,” laments their 11-year-old son, Cjay, as he clambers back up the slope to their shack.

The catch is sufficient to provide the family a proper meal but won't help rebuild their home, which was destroyed late last year when a record-breaking six consecutive storms battered the Philippines. Ever since November, the Reyes family has lived here, beneath tarpaulin and nipa palm, wedged between crashing waves and a coastal highway in northeastern Luzon. When it rains, water gushes through gaps in the roof. At night, passing juggernauts rattle the structure, shaking them from their slumber. With no locks or even doors, passing strangers sometimes wander inside.

“I find it hard to sleep and worry that one of the trucks might hit us,” says Noemi, 42, as she cleans and guts the fish for traditional sinigang sour soup.

It’s a precarious existence that is all too common in the Philippines, an archipelago nation of 115 million people scattered across more than 7,000 islands. The sea remains the lifeblood of the country. Fishing employs over 1.6 million people, whose catch is the nation’s principal protein source, a daily bounty of some 12,000 tons. But it’s a relationship that has become increasingly strained. Intensifying typhoons and dwindling catches are transforming what has always been the font of life into a source of destruction and despair.

“Sometimes the sea is all about luck,” shrugs Marionito, 50, as he collapses exhausted onto the timber platform that sleeps the couple and five of their nine children.

MEER VERHALEN VAN Time

Time

Time

Heated Rivalry depicts autism with a familiar kind of love

THE MAJORITY OF AUTISTIC AND AUTISTIC-coded characters in film and television have long looked, moved, and sounded a certain way. Think Dustin Hoffman's Raymond in Rain Man, Jim Parsons' Sheldon in The Big Bang Theory, or Freddie Highmore's Sean in The Good Doctor.

time to read

2 mins

February 09, 2026

Time

Time

A musical about a religious zealot that's never boring

HOW MUCH DO AMBITION AND CHUTZPAH count in filmmaking these days? The Testament of Ann Lee, directed by Mona Fastvold, is for better or worse like no other movie you've seen.

time to read

2 mins

February 09, 2026

Time

Time

A SPEEDSKATING SENSATION

Erin Jackson's unconventional path to her third Olympics

time to read

2 mins

February 09, 2026

Time

Time

5 doctor-approved ways to use AI for health information

LAST SUMMER, LANCE JOHNSON WOKE up in the middle of the night with excruciating pain in his lower right side. He initially blamed it on the pizza and ice cream he had enjoyed the night before. But five sleepless hours later, the 17-year-old from Phoenix was still suffering, so he decided to consult the nearest expert: ChatGPT.

time to read

2 mins

February 09, 2026

Time

Time

Iranian protesters say Trump 'betrayed' them

SEVEN TIMES IN EIGHT DAYS, U.S. PRESIDENT DONALD Trump promised to come to the aid of Iranian protesters if the country's authoritarian regime began killing them in the streets. When it did—slaying thousands on Jan. 8 and 9— Trump doubled down. “KEEP PROTESTING” he urged on Truth Social on Jan. 12. “HELP IS ON ITS WAY.”

time to read

5 mins

February 09, 2026

Time

Time

DOMESTIC DISTURBANCE

How a soapy strain of thriller became the defining metaphor of our time

time to read

6 mins

February 09, 2026

Time

Venezuelan oil

After the U.S. military operation that led to the capture of Venezuela's President, Nicolás Maduro, Secretary of State Marco Rubio said that the U.S. would seize and sell up to 50 million barrels of the South American nation's oil.

time to read

1 min

February 09, 2026

Time

Time

The women saving America's climate data

A COUPLE OF WEEKS AFTER DONALD TRUMP WAS elected President for the second time, a group of federal data watchers gathered in Denice Ross’s dining room. As chief U.S. data scientist under the Biden Administration, Ross had a clear window into just how much information the government collects—whether monitoring a fleet of ocean buoys to guide safe shipping routes or tracking how vulnerable communities are to disaster—and just how useful it is.

time to read

5 mins

February 09, 2026

Time

Time

Nia DaCosta The director of 28 Years Later: The Bone Temple on stepping into a storied zombie franchise and calibrating just how much gore serves the story

You've worked with Tessa Thompson on three projects. Do you consider her a muse?

time to read

3 mins

February 09, 2026

Time

Time

The Risk Report

THE U.K., FRANCE, AND GERMANY—Europe's political core—begin 2026 with weak, unpopular governments under siege from populists on both the left and right, and a Trump Administration openly working to undermine them. None of these countries holds general elections this year, but all three face risks of political paralysis—and maybe lasting damage.

time to read

2 mins

February 09, 2026

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size