'What I’ve come to love most about the job is the chaos.... Thanks to your support, every reel we shoot and every story we write is able to reach the communities'What I’ve come to love most about the job is the chaos.... Thanks to your support, every reel we shoot and every story we write is able to reach the communities

#CourageON: We are able to thrive in the chaos of storytelling, thanks to you

2025/12/16 18:00

Hello! I’m Juno Reyes. I joined Rappler as a lifestyle and entertainment multimedia reporter in 2023. 

My journey started in 2022, however — first serving as an intern under the same section. Back then, I was a college student who just wanted to write about her favorite things: the art I’d see in my surroundings, and the music that dominated my playlists. 

These have always been my comfort topics. And so, even when I already became a full-time employee, any chance I got, I’d write about a visual artist whose command of the paintbrush I admired, or a singer or band I felt deserved to be known by more listeners. 

A backstage interview with alternative folk band The Ridleys before Day 2 of their 2024 concert. 

But the beats of lifestyle and entertainment are as broad as they come. You have to be comfortable with writing about anything under the sun — from travel to literature to film to pageants and everything in between. 

It’s why I can never really give my friends a proper answer whenever they ask me what a day at work is like. I get to see some of my favorite figures in the scene, yes, but what I’ve come to love most about the job is the chaos. 

This is when I got to speak with Indian-American artist Raveena about her craft — years after I first began listening to her music.

It’s a rollercoaster, but in the best way possible. 

One minute, I could be in the office talking to a local musician about their craft on our show, Rappler Live Jam, and just a few hours later, I’m scouring the internet for the prices of specific luxury items to see if there’s any truth behind a certain senator’s claim that his net worth only comes out to P18.84 million. 

I’m not making this up. It’s a real-life experience of mine — and it would be the exact moment I would fully understand that lifestyle and entertainment don’t exist in a vacuum. They’re not just fluff. In one way or another, they will always, always intersect with current events. I deem it important to connect these two worlds, and hopefully, help our readers make sense of it all. 

My love for music is the best way to explain this. Some days, I write profiles on artists to capture their enduring legacies or the lasting impact they’re beginning to make in the music scene. Other days, I find myself talking to several jingle makers to find out why music is such a viable tool for political campaigns. 

I still have many more years ahead of me, and a long, long way to go before I even begin to attain half the wisdom my editors and mentors in Rappler have developed. Nonetheless, everything I’ve experienced thus far has shown me how dynamic journalism is. 

In class, I’d always hear from my professors that journalism is a fast-paced industry. For the longest time, I thought this just meant the news moved quickly, or that developments in separate issues would sometimes come one after the other. I wasn’t wrong in thinking that, but I would soon learn that this also meant having to adjust to the way news is consumed in the first place. 

In the age of social media, fewer people are reading articles, and it’s enabled us to experiment with different forms of content. 

Nowadays, a big portion of the work we do comes not just from getting the news out there, but determining the best way to relay it to the public. When we go out, we ask ourselves: How do we make this interesting for readers, and how do we make it just as interesting for audiovisual consumers? 

Thanks to your support, every reel we shoot and every story we write is able to reach the communities it’s meant to serve. 

All this is just a part of our fight to continue to tell stories that ignite change, spotlight local talent, and make sense of current affairs. 

Join us in our journey to keep our drive for this kind of storytelling going. – Rappler.com

Sorumluluk Reddi: Bu sitede yeniden yayınlanan makaleler, halka açık platformlardan alınmıştır ve yalnızca bilgilendirme amaçlıdır. MEXC'nin görüşlerini yansıtmayabilir. Tüm hakları telif sahiplerine aittir. Herhangi bir içeriğin üçüncü taraf haklarını ihlal ettiğini düşünüyorsanız, kaldırılması için lütfen service@support.mexc.com ile iletişime geçin. MEXC, içeriğin doğruluğu, eksiksizliği veya güncelliği konusunda hiçbir garanti vermez ve sağlanan bilgilere dayalı olarak alınan herhangi bir eylemden sorumlu değildir. İçerik, finansal, yasal veya diğer profesyonel tavsiye niteliğinde değildir ve MEXC tarafından bir tavsiye veya onay olarak değerlendirilmemelidir.

Ayrıca Şunları da Beğenebilirsiniz

Shiba Inu (SHIB) vs Little Pepe (LILPEPE): Which Meme Coin Will Take the Crown from Dogecoin (DOGE)?

Shiba Inu (SHIB) vs Little Pepe (LILPEPE): Which Meme Coin Will Take the Crown from Dogecoin (DOGE)?

The post Shiba Inu (SHIB) vs Little Pepe (LILPEPE): Which Meme Coin Will Take the Crown from Dogecoin (DOGE)? appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Dogecoin has been the face of meme coins for a long time. From Elon Musk tweets to a robust community, DOGE has managed to stay alive. But in 2025, things appear slightly different. Will Shiba Inu keep pursuing Dogecoin, or will new contender Little Pepe pass them both by? Dogecoin (DOGE): Still the Benchmark Dogecoin is trading just above $0.2452, up 10.63% over the past week. That steady climb shows why DOGE still matters: it has the liquidity, the listings, and the recognition that few meme tokens can match. Analysts see its price grinding higher into year-end, supported by altcoin momentum and ETF launches in the U.S. But here’s the thing: DOGE is no longer a scrappy underdog. With a market cap already in the tens of billions, turning $100 into $10,000 here is nearly impossible. It’s the Bitcoin of meme coins: reliable, liquid, and still iconic, but its days of 1,000× gains are behind it. Shiba Inu (SHIB): Big Name, Slowing Engine Shiba Inu sits at $0.00001349 with a market cap of $7.6 billion. It’s clawed back momentum with a 3.98% monthly surge, and analysts project a further 9.26% weekly gain to $0.00001418. Token burns and the expansion of Shibarium, its Layer-2 solution, keep the ecosystem alive. That said, SHIB’s size is also its weakness. Even with whales accumulating another 62 billion tokens, growth projections hover in the 400%–500% range, which is impressive but pales in comparison to what early buyers saw in 2021. SHIB is in the odd position of being too big to vanish, but too large to repeat its breakout magic. Little Pepe (LILPEPE): The New Challenger SHIB grew on pure hype, but LILPEPE comes with real infrastructure. The project is building an Ethereum-compatible Layer-2 network designed for meme tokens, with near-zero fees, sniper-bot resistance, and…
Paylaş
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/10/04 23:32
Kodiak Sciences Announces Pricing of Upsized Public Offering of Common Stock

Kodiak Sciences Announces Pricing of Upsized Public Offering of Common Stock

PALO ALTO, Calif., Dec. 16, 2025 /PRNewswire/ — Kodiak Sciences Inc. (Nasdaq: KOD), a precommercial retina focused biotechnology company committed to researching
Paylaş
AI Journal2025/12/17 12:15
Oil jumps over 1% on Venezuela oil blockade

Oil jumps over 1% on Venezuela oil blockade

Oil prices rose more than 1 percent on Wednesday after US President Donald Trump ordered “a total and complete” blockade of all sanctioned oil tankers entering
Paylaş
Agbi2025/12/17 11:55