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+ Follow NEW KIND Tag
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    [results] => Array
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            [0] => Array
                (
                    [ArticleID] => 418788
                    [Title] => THE QLE AWARDS
                    [Summary] => 

To be honest, I’d rather call it the Anton Ego Awards, after the character of the critic in the animated film Ratatouille. If anything, he’s the best character in the film in the sense that all the presumptions about him were overturned in the film’s climax.

[DatePublished] => 2008-11-28 00:00:00 [ColumnID] => 135989 [Focus] => 0 [AuthorID] => 1308998 [AuthorName] => Erwin T. Romulo [SectionName] => Young Star [SectionUrl] => young-star [URL] => ) [1] => Array ( [ArticleID] => 70769 [Title] => Being boring [Summary] =>

The future is bleak. Or at least not as bright as it used to be. The Space Age is over and nothing but kitsch remains of those atomic-powered dreams of tomorrow. Even the idea of dystopia no longer carries the imaginative charge it did in the 1980s or ‘90s. [DatePublished] => 2008-07-04 00:00:00 [ColumnID] => 135989 [Focus] => 0 [AuthorID] => 1308998 [AuthorName] => Erwin T. Romulo [SectionName] => Young Star [SectionUrl] => young-star [URL] => ) ) )

NEW KIND
Array
(
    [results] => Array
        (
            [0] => Array
                (
                    [ArticleID] => 418788
                    [Title] => THE QLE AWARDS
                    [Summary] => 

To be honest, I’d rather call it the Anton Ego Awards, after the character of the critic in the animated film Ratatouille. If anything, he’s the best character in the film in the sense that all the presumptions about him were overturned in the film’s climax.

[DatePublished] => 2008-11-28 00:00:00 [ColumnID] => 135989 [Focus] => 0 [AuthorID] => 1308998 [AuthorName] => Erwin T. Romulo [SectionName] => Young Star [SectionUrl] => young-star [URL] => ) [1] => Array ( [ArticleID] => 70769 [Title] => Being boring [Summary] =>

The future is bleak. Or at least not as bright as it used to be. The Space Age is over and nothing but kitsch remains of those atomic-powered dreams of tomorrow. Even the idea of dystopia no longer carries the imaginative charge it did in the 1980s or ‘90s. [DatePublished] => 2008-07-04 00:00:00 [ColumnID] => 135989 [Focus] => 0 [AuthorID] => 1308998 [AuthorName] => Erwin T. Romulo [SectionName] => Young Star [SectionUrl] => young-star [URL] => ) ) )

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