Philippines: Podcast steers clear of coronavirus hysteria

As the Coronavirus panic was rising in the Philippines, Puma Podcast decided to calmly lay out the facts and steer away from sensationalism and hysteria.


Take a deep breath and listen to Covid-19 facts!

“With a podcast the engagement is much more personal. It’s a warmer medium. It sets us apart from the trolling culture, it insulates us from the paranoia, the anger and the overall culture of fake news.” 

Roby Alampay

CEO AND HOST, PUMAPODCAST

THE COVID DIARIES

As part of their coronavirus coverage, PumaPodcast decided to run a series of short, low-tech podcasts titled the Covid Diaries featuring interviews with doctors, people who’ve been positively diagnosed with Covid-19, urban poor, volunteers, relatives of fatalities and people who are trying to just get by.

LAS PINAS, PHILIPPINES – MARCH 16: Filipino commuters riding a bus are seen wearing facemasks on March 16, 2020 in Las Pinas, Metro Manila, Philippines. The Philippine government expanded Monday its lockdown on capital Manila to the whole of Luzon, the largest and most populous island in the country, to prevent the spread of COVID-19. The Philippines’ Department of Health has so far confirmed 142 cases of the new coronavirus in the country, with at least 12 recorded fatalities. (Photo by Ezra Acayan/Getty Images)

CRISIS HIGHLIGHTS NEED FOR INFORMATION

A lack of reliable information in the Philippines

“In the Philippines, Covid-19 information to the public has been hampered by the government’s lack of information strategy in the Philippines resulting in confusing, uncoordinated messages from various government officials. The main issue has therefore not been suppression or deceit, but rather a more defensive stance from the part of the government in its communication. Instead, a palpable mobilisation of troll armies has been visible in the online information sphere – perceived by the public as government-sponsored, -sanctioned or at the very least -enabled with the primary objective of defending and rationalising potential failings of government action related to the virus and less so, instigating attacks on legitimate media.”

Carl Javier

COO, PUMAPODCAST

“With podcasts, the engagement is much more personal. It’s a warmer medium than others. It sets us apart from the trolling culture, it insulates us from the paranoia, the anger and the overall culture of fake news that exists on social media.”

Roby Alampay

CEO AND HOST, PUMAPODCAST

Front cover of the report Covid-19 and the media: A pandemic of paradoxes, white text on a black background

Covid-19

A TURNING POINT FOR INDEPENDENT MEDIA?


Around the world, Covid-19 is re-awakening people to the vital role that independent media plays in their societies. 

From Afghanistan to Zimbabwe, many independent media outlets are seeing their audiences grow as people realise they need quality information to navigate the crisis.