COLORS. Baguio’s Christmas tree glows in full color as fireworks burst overhead and the SLU Lantern Parade rolls in — one spectacular moment where light, culture, and community all came together on Session Road. Mia Magdalena Fokno/RapplerCOLORS. Baguio’s Christmas tree glows in full color as fireworks burst overhead and the SLU Lantern Parade rolls in — one spectacular moment where light, culture, and community all came together on Session Road. Mia Magdalena Fokno/Rappler

Baguio breathes Christmas: Lights, lanterns, and a city alive

2025/12/06 08:00

BAGUIO, Philippines – The first night of December always hits differently in Baguio, but this year, it felt like the city took one deep breath and exhaled pure Christmas magic. 

Before sunset, people began lining Session Road. By 4:30 pm, the Baguio police estimated the crowd at 30,000, including the hundreds set to join the Saint Louis University Lantern Parade.

It was not chaos. Rather, it was community – the very Baguio way of filling every curb, step, and ledge with anticipation.

Baguio3 Christmas 2025HIGH ENERGY. A bright blue dragon snakes through the crowd, its fiery tail and crashing waves bringing the parade’s energy to a roaring high. Mia Magdalena Fokno/Rappler

When the lights flickered on, the crowd’s collective gasp said it all. The Upper Session Road Christmas tree was towering and seemed alive. Built largely from bamboo and softened with layers of Peruvian ferns, red and Chinese poinsettias, lemon pine, and vincas as ground cover, it felt like a tribute to Baguio’s plantitas (people who love plants and gardening) and every green thumb who has ever whispered, “Kaya ko ’yan alagaan (I can grow that).”

The city government decided this year’s decorations should be organic, indigenous, and kinder to the environment, producing less waste after the season and more beauty rooted in nature. Even the Botanical Garden followed suit with local flowers and natural elements.

Credit goes to the artists and craftsmen like Resty Lopez, Joey Quinio, Reydon Amking, and James Calicdan whose hands shaped the tree into something that looks grown, not built.

Baguio1 Christmas 2025CREATIVITY. Giant fish and glowing lotus lanterns swirl down Session Road, filling the night with color, rhythm, and pure SLU creativity. Mia Magdalena Fokno/Rappler

The program opened with the familiar sound of the UB Rondalla, instantly setting a homegrown celebratory tone. UB Voices and Graces soon lifted the mood higher with doxology, hymns, and carols.

The city’s leaders offered messages rooted in gratitude, unity, and the meaning of light. Mayor Benjamin Magalong’s words echoed through the crowd: “Ang tunay na Pasko ay hindi nasusukat sa garbo o dami ng dekorasyon. Nasusukat ito sa kabutihan ng puso – sa ating pagpapatawad, pag-unawa, at sa liwanag na kaya nating ibahagi sa isa’t isa.”

(Christmas is not measured by grandeur or the number of decorations. It is measured by the goodness of the heart, by our forgiveness, understanding, and the light we can share with one another.)

Then, in a 10-second countdown and a roar from the crowd, Baguio lit up.

Baguio4 Christmas 2025COLORS. Baguio’s Christmas tree glows in full color as fireworks burst overhead and the SLU Lantern Parade rolls in — one spectacular moment where light, culture, and community all came together on Session Road. Mia Magdalena Fokno/Rappler

The tree burst into color, and fireworks from SM City Baguio drenched the sky in gold and ember, reflecting off dramatic December clouds that seemed as ready for the season as everyone else. The weather wasn’t perfect, but the night was.

Immediately after the fireworks, the crowd turned to the 17th Saint Louis University Lantern Parade, a tradition that draws thousands each year. Silk lanterns swayed, glowing floats rolled past, students danced in coordinated costumes, and thousands of phones captured every passing light. Color, culture, and creativity swept through Session Road.

This year, the parade became a world tour of light festivals, each represented in artistic displays by an SLU school. Lanterns inspired by Germany and the Netherlands glowed in the evening breeze. Vietnam’s Hội An Lantern Festival was also recreated, while Myanmar’s Tazaungdaing Festival of Lights appeared in crafted lanterns and floats. 

Australia’s Moon Lantern Trail shimmered alongside Thailand’s Yi Peng Festival. Lanterns evoking South Korea’s Seoul Festival and Japan’s Nagasaki Festival floated past. The parade also showed vibrant representations of India’s Diwali.

When the parade ended, Session Road still hummed with laughter and conversation. The glow of the evening lingered, the kind of warmth you carry home after a perfect night. Walking back toward Cathedral Loop, it felt as if December had officially arrived.

The Christmas tree was greener than ever. The city was bathed in lights. The parade had “crisscrossed” continents, bringing distant cultures into Baguio’s streets. And the community had shown up once again for moments that truly matter. – Rappler.com

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The post U.S. Court Finds Pastor Found Guilty in $3M Crypto Scam appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Crime 18 September 2025 | 04:05 A Colorado judge has brought closure to one of the state’s most unusual cryptocurrency scandals, declaring INDXcoin to be a fraudulent operation and ordering its founders, Denver pastor Eli Regalado and his wife Kaitlyn, to repay $3.34 million. The ruling, issued by District Court Judge Heidi L. Kutcher, came nearly two years after the couple persuaded hundreds of people to invest in their token, promising safety and abundance through a Christian-branded platform called the Kingdom Wealth Exchange. The scheme ran between June 2022 and April 2023 and drew in more than 300 participants, many of them members of local church networks. Marketing materials portrayed INDXcoin as a low-risk gateway to prosperity, yet the project unraveled almost immediately. The exchange itself collapsed within 24 hours of launch, wiping out investors’ money. Despite this failure—and despite an auditor’s damning review that gave the system a “0 out of 10” for security—the Regalados kept presenting it as a solid opportunity. Colorado regulators argued that the couple’s faith-based appeal was central to the fraud. Securities Commissioner Tung Chan said the Regalados “dressed an old scam in new technology” and used their standing within the Christian community to convince people who had little knowledge of crypto. For him, the case illustrates how modern digital assets can be exploited to replicate classic Ponzi-style tactics under a different name. Court filings revealed where much of the money ended up: luxury goods, vacations, jewelry, a Range Rover, high-end clothing, and even dental procedures. In a video that drew worldwide attention earlier this year, Eli Regalado admitted the funds had been spent, explaining that a portion went to taxes while the remainder was used for a home renovation he claimed was divinely inspired. The judgment not only confirms that INDXcoin qualifies as a…
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BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 09:14