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Rated Korina
Rated Korina
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Rated Korina
Title card since 2020
Also known asRated K: Handa na ba Kayo? (2004–05)
Rated K (2005–20)
GenreNewscast, Magazine,
Lifestyle
Created byABS-CBN Studios (2004–20; since 2023)
Albee Benitez (2020–21)
Korina Sanchez-Roxas (since 2021)
Developed byABS-CBN News and Current Affairs (2004–20; since 2023)
Brightlight Productions (2020–23)
Directed byKits Fernandez
Presented byKorina Sanchez
Country of originPhilippines
Original languageFilipino
No. of episodes1,091
Production
Running time60 minutes
Production companiesABS-CBN News and Current Affairs (2004–20; since 2023)
Brightlight Productions (2020–23)
Viktory 8 Media, Inc. (2020–present)
News5 (2020–21)
Original release
NetworkABS-CBN
ReleaseMay 30, 2004 (2004-05-30) –
May 3, 2020 (2020-05-03)
NetworkTV5
ReleaseOctober 24, 2020 (2020-10-24) –
present
NetworkKapamilya Channel[a]
ReleaseJune 19, 2021 (2021-06-19) –
present
NetworkAll TV
ReleaseJune 29, 2025 (2025-06-29) –
present
Related

Rated Korina, formerly Rated K, is a Philippine television news magazine show broadcast by ABS-CBN, TV5, Kapamilya Channel, A2Z, and All TV. Hosted by Korina Sanchez, it aired on the network's Sunday evening line-up from May 30, 2004, to May 3, 2020, replacing Sharon and was replaced by Iba 'Yan. The show returned on TV5 on October 24, 2020, followed by a broadcast on Kapamilya Channel on June 19, 2021.

Premise

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Korina Sanchez serves as the host.

The program includes gripping stories on national issues, in-depth interviews with the most notable figures and newsmakers, as well as touching pieces on regular Filipinos who have had exceptional experiences. In addition to supporting those in need, the show is well known for its signature initiative, the "Korina's Handog Tsinelas Campaign," which strives to improve the lives of millions of Filipino children one pair of slippers at a time.[1]

History

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Rated Korina was launched as Balitang K in 1996 as an offshoot of the Balitang K segment of TV Patrol when Sanchez replaced Mel Tiangco after the latter was suspended from the network until Noli de Castro became the sole anchor of the said newscast in the same year.

The program was aired every Sunday night on ABS-CBN's Yes Weekend! block. It aired a replay telecast on DZMM TeleRadyo every Monday at 2:00 PM and Tuesday at 1:00 AM, and on Jeepney TV every Wednesday at 4:30 PM, It also aired worldwide via TFC. The program is similar in style and presentation to the defunct news magazine show Balitang K which was also hosted by Sanchez herself.

On August 11, 2019, Rated K was moved to Goin' Bulilit's timeslot of 6:30 pm to give way for iWant Originals. The show was temporarily suspended on May 3, 2020, due to the ABS-CBN shutdown because of the cease and desist order of the National Telecommunications Commission (NTC), following the network's 25-year franchise expired on May 4.

Rated K was officially cancelled, having been excluded from the programming lineup of Kapamilya Channel and replaced by Iba 'Yan, hosted by Angel Locsin. Sanchez and its staff continued the program as an online show utilizing their social media accounts.

The show moved to TV5 and was retitled as Rated Korina (using the former DZMM radio program title), after Sanchez signed a contract with Brightlight Productions on October 7, 2020. The second incarnation of Rated K premiered on the network's Saturday afternoon block on October 24, as a co-production between Brightlight and Viktory 8 Media.

The show went on series break on April 24, 2021, until it returned to its original international TV platform, TFC on May 29.

On June 19 and 20, 2021, the show returned for a new season. It also began airing on ABS-CBN's Kapamilya Channel, Kapamilya Online Live, and ZOE TV's A2Z, while maintaining its delayed broadcast on One PH and TV5.

On June 17, 2023, after more than two years of being co-produced by Brightlight Productions, the show handed back co-production to ABS-CBN Studios and ABS-CBN News. The delayed telecast on One PH concluded the next day, while maintaining its airing on TV5. Since the change in co-production, ABS-CBN resumes its role as the primary distributor of the show, using existing facilities as playout for the program.

On June 29, 2025, the show expanded its airing to All TV, marking its return to channels 2 and 16 in Mega Manila and regional channels previously held by ABS-CBN until 2020. This occurred just a year and 2 months after ABS-CBN Corporation and Advanced Media Broadcasting System (AMBS), signed content agreements to air ABS-CBN programs on the said channel.[2]

Radio program

[edit]

A radio show entitled Rated Korina was aired on DZMM and cable channel DZMM TeleRadyo from January 9, 2012, to January 3, 2014, and was replaced by Sakto. Sanchez resigned from her radio program to pursue her master's degree at Ateneo de Manila University.

Reception

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Rated Korina is one of the longest-running shows on ABS-CBN, regarded for its credibility and reliability featuring the latest trends in food, entertainment, leisure, science, and technology.[3] Manila Standard hailed the show as "one of the most trusted platforms of both local and international celebrities."[3] The show has already received countless accolades and recognitions across the world. Rated Korina has been a finalist in New York Festivals International TV and Film Awards twice (2009 and 2012);[4] while Sanchez herself was honored as 'Highly Commended' in the category" Current Affairs Presenter" at 2012 Asian Television Awards for her outstanding work.[5][6]

Rated Korina is an eight-time "Best Magazine Show" winner at the PMPC Star Awards for Television[7] while the host, Sanchez, is a ten-time "Best Magazine Show Host" winner at the same ceremony.[8] Since the show premiered on television, the show has since been among the most watched weekend shows in the Philippines. According to Kantar Media, the show consistently logged high viewership attaining 26.9% (Total Philippines Household Ratings) on June 24, 2012.[9]

See also

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Notes

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References

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[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Rated Korina is a Philippine television and lifestyle show hosted by Korina Sanchez-Roxas. The program, formerly known as Rated K, features investigative reports and human interest stories from various sectors of society, emphasizing in-depth storytelling and production quality. It airs on networks such as TV5, A2Z, , and , with episodes typically broadcast on weekends. Launched in its current iteration through a 2023 co-production agreement between Sanchez-Roxas and , the show revives a format that has long showcased the host's journalistic approach to public narratives. Notable for its focus on real-life experiences and societal insights, Rated Korina maintains high standards in , distinguishing it within Philippine broadcast media. The series has garnered a substantial audience, evidenced by its active presence and consistent viewership on platforms like .

Overview

Premise and Content Focus

Rated Korina serves as a and program centered on real-life narratives sourced from everyday individuals across various societal strata. The show highlights "big stories from all walks of life," drawing from verifiable human experiences that span personal achievements, community challenges, and unexpected events, presented through genres including , , and sports. This format distinguishes Rated Korina from conventional hard news by incorporating lifestyle-oriented perspectives, such as motivational accounts of resilience and actionable takeaways from actual occurrences, thereby emphasizing cause-and-effect dynamics in participants' lives over abstract reporting. The content prioritizes empirical accounts, focusing on substantive details of human endeavors rather than exaggerated elements, as evidenced by the program's consistent portrayal of grounded, multi-faceted tales.

Format and Segments

Rated Korina employs a magazine-style format emphasizing narrative-driven features that incorporate on-site footage, direct interviews, and eyewitness accounts to substantiate claims and trace causal sequences in real-world events. Episodes generally structure around an opening host narration to preview themes, followed by two to three extended segments delving into human-interest profiles or investigative reports, such as examinations of how financial distress precipitates adaptive behaviors leading to . Recurring segments prioritize empirical grounding over speculation, featuring profiles of ordinary individuals navigating extraordinary circumstances—often highlighting verifiable chains of causation, like policy impacts on local economies yielding unexpected innovations—and conclude with viewer engagement through on-air queries or prompts for related anecdotes. Occasional thematic specials, such as "Katatakutan" episodes focused on reported or eerie incidents corroborated by participant testimonies and historical records, maintain a commitment to documented events rather than fabrication. Over its run, the format evolved from concise, clip-based vignettes in early seasons to more expansive, documentary-like narratives by the mid-2010s, allowing deeper integration of visual evidence like time-stamped field recordings and multi-source corroboration to enhance factual depth without diluting pacing. This shift supported sustained viewer retention by balancing accessibility with rigorous sourcing, distinguishing it from lighter programming.

Production and Development

Creation and Initial Launch

Rated K, the precursor to Rated Korina, premiered on on May 30, 2004, occupying the Sunday evening slot previously held by the talk-variety program Sharon hosted by . Developed by under the direction of executive producer Kits Fernandez, the show was hosted by veteran broadcast journalist and adopted a format emphasizing and human interest features. Intended initially as a temporary replacement following the end of Sharon, Rated K quickly demonstrated strong viewer appeal through its focus on factual reporting and relatable storytelling, prompting ABS-CBN to extend its run beyond the planned interim period. The program's early episodes aired from 5:30 p.m. to 6:30 p.m., establishing a foundation for Sanchez's signature style of in-depth segments that prioritized over . By its 15th anniversary in 2019, Rated K had solidified its position as a staple of Philippine programming, reflecting sustained audience engagement with its commitment to verifiable narratives amid a competitive landscape of opinion-heavy formats.

Production Team and Evolution

has served as the primary host and of Rated Korina since its inception, overseeing content selection and narrative structure to emphasize firsthand accounts and verifiable events. The core production team includes field reporters tasked with on-site data collection, enabling direct empirical sourcing from locations rather than relying solely on secondary studio inputs. During the –2023 period following the broadcast shutdown, handled overall production for the TV5 airing, adapting workflows to independent facilities while preserving the focus on investigative segments derived from reporter fieldwork. Production techniques evolved from predominantly studio-based discussions in early years to greater reliance on location filming post-, as Sanchez highlighted expeditions to and remote barangays to capture causal sequences of events unfiltered by intermediaries. This shift facilitated enhanced accuracy in depicting real-time dynamics, with reporters documenting environmental and testimonial evidence on-site. By the 2023 revival under an co-production agreement, digital verification tools were integrated for cross-checking footage and claims, aligning resources toward substantive inquiry over aesthetic enhancements. Resource allocation consistently prioritized extended field operations and fact scrutiny, with adaptations during network transitions—such as the 2023 reversion from Brightlight to —ensuring continuity in empirical depth without compromising operational integrity. These changes underscored a commitment to causal fidelity, as production emphasized reporter-led gathering to mitigate interpretive biases inherent in remote .

Broadcast History

Original Run on ABS-CBN (2004–2020)

Rated K, later rebranded as Rated Korina, premiered on ABS-CBN on May 30, 2004, in the Sunday evening slot as a temporary substitute for the variety program Sharon. The news magazine format, hosted by Korina Sanchez, emphasized human interest stories drawn from everyday Filipinos' experiences, including family struggles, personal triumphs, and community challenges, which resonated with viewers and prompted its extension beyond the initial plan. Throughout its tenure, the show aired consistently on Sundays, evolving to incorporate on-location reporting and interviews that highlighted individual resilience and practical outcomes in social contexts, such as economic hardships and local initiatives, without relying on institutional narratives. By the mid-2010s, production adaptations included enhanced field segments to capture verifiable real-world data on topics like and household dynamics, maintaining a focus on causal factors like personal over broader systemic attributions. The original run concluded with its final episode on May 3, 2020, amid ABS-CBN's operational halt following Congress's rejection of the network's franchise renewal application, which prevented continued broadcasting. The closing broadcasts featured unfiltered accounts of participants' life trajectories, underscoring tangible results from the stories covered over 16 years.

Hiatus, Network Shifts, and Revival (2020–2023)

Following the denial of ABS-CBN's congressional franchise on July 10, 2020, which led to the network's cessation of free-to-air television broadcasts by May 5, 2020, Rated K concluded its original run, entering an indefinite hiatus as part of broader operational cutbacks. Korina Sanchez, the program's host and executive producer, was among the high-profile talents discontinued from ABS-CBN employment on July 17, 2020, amid mass retrenchments affecting over 11,000 workers due to the regulatory shutdown enforced by the National Telecommunications Commission (NTC). This franchise revocation stemmed from unresolved issues including alleged tax delinquencies exceeding ₱23 billion and violations of foreign ownership caps under the 1935 Public Service Act, prompting the Duterte administration to withhold renewal despite ABS-CBN's prior 25-year operations without interruption. To sustain the program, Sanchez pivoted to independent production via her company, , securing a co-production agreement with on October 7, 2020. The show relaunched as Rated Korina—retitled to emphasize the host's personal brand—premiering on TV5 on October 24, 2020, in a Saturday 4:00–5:00 p.m. slot, replacing lighter fare like Reel Action Sabado. This shift retained the core format of human-interest stories and investigative segments but incorporated digital streaming elements for broader reach, airing initially on TV5's linear broadcast before expanding to online platforms like for on-demand access. By mid-2021, amid ongoing restrictions, Rated Korina adapted further through alliances with 's surviving platforms, resuming on A2Z Channel 11 (a TV5- ) and on June 19, 2021, with simultaneous TV5 airing from June 20. This multi-network distribution—totaling three channels plus streaming—addressed viewership fragmentation post-shutdown, with episodes focusing on verifiable narratives from everyday , such as survival stories and community issues, while navigating production constraints like reduced budgets and venue limitations under protocols. The revival emphasized self-sustained storytelling independent of network oversight, allowing continuity of segments prioritizing empirical accounts over , though it faced logistical hurdles in coordinating cross-platform simulcasts until stabilizing by late 2021.

Recent Developments and Current Status (2023–Present)

In July 2023, Korina Sanchez signed a co-production agreement with to revive and sustain Rated Korina amid ongoing network collaborations with TV5. The program aired weekly on Saturdays at 6:15–7:15 p.m. on , A2Z, and Kapamilya Online Live until June 21, 2025, with a delayed slot at 9:45 p.m. on TV5. On June 29, 2025, it shifted to Sundays at 8:30–9:30 p.m. across , A2Z, and the newly added (channels 2 and 16 in ), while simulcasting at 9:30 p.m. on TV5 to broaden reach. As of October 2025, Rated Korina continues broadcasting new episodes focusing on human interest stories, such as community events, cultural festivals like Sinulog, and personal resilience narratives, with full episodes available via replay on platforms including YouTube. Distribution spans TV5, Kapamilya Channel, A2Z, All TV, and streaming services like IWantTFC, enhancing accessibility for domestic and overseas audiences.

Radio Adaptation

DZMM Radio Program (2012–2014)

The Rated Korina radio program aired weekdays from 10:00 a.m. to 11:00 a.m. on Radyo Patrol 630, with a on the cable channel DZMM TeleRadyo, serving as an audio counterpart to the concurrent television series. Launched on January 9, 2012, as part of 's push into bolder programming amid the station's top ranking in the December 2011 Nielsen with an average 18.1% share, the show emphasized hosted discussions and guest interviews on diverse topics. The program concluded on January 3, 2014, and was succeeded by Sakto in the time slot. Unlike the visual of the , the radio version relied on verbal , live guest segments, and listener to explore issues, aligning with DZMM's tradition of interactive . This adaptation ran concurrently with the television show but operated independently, ending after two years without extending into further seasons.

Reception and Metrics

Viewership Ratings and Commercial Performance

During its original run on from 2004 to 2020, Rated Korina (then Rated K) maintained strong viewership, frequently securing top positions in evening slots with national household ratings in the mid-20s percent range. An October 2017 episode featuring achieved a 26.4% national TV rating, outperforming rival 's 18.2%, per Kantar Media data. In the first quarter of , the program ranked as the most watched TV show nationwide, according to Kantar Media measurements. Earlier data from 2010 showed an average rating of 29%. A June 24, 2012, episode logged a 26.9% total household rating, reflecting consistent audience draw for its human-interest format. These figures positioned Rated K ahead of competitors in the magazine show category, contributing to its commercial appeal through sustained advertiser interest in its lifestyle-oriented integrations, which embedded promotions within segments to leverage high engagement. Following the 2020 hiatus due to ABS-CBN's franchise expiration, Rated Korina revived across platforms including TV5, , A2Z, and , resuming its slot in June 2025. While specific episode ratings post-revival remain less documented amid shifts to multi-channel distribution, TV5's overall audience share stood at 10.4% in early 2025 Nielsen data, supporting the program's continued viability in a fragmented market. The longevity and format adaptations underscore empirical demand, with embedded advertorials providing revenue streams tied to viewer retention in non-sensational content.

Critical and Audience Reception

Rated Korina has received industry recognition for its journalistic contributions, including Korina Sanchez's win for Best Magazine Show Host at the 37th Philippine Movie Press Club (PMPC) Star Awards for Television in 2025. The program has also been associated with broader accolades for Sanchez's career, such as the Excellence in Journalism Award from the Rotary Club of Manila, reflecting appreciation for its storytelling standards and production quality as affirmed by award-giving bodies. These honors underscore perceptions among peers of the show's commitment to in-depth features drawn from real-life narratives, often emphasizing individual agency and verifiable outcomes in human interest segments. Media analysts and watchdogs have offered mixed assessments, praising the factual orientation of its investigative elements while critiquing instances of narrative framing that prioritize inspirational personal stories over comprehensive systemic analysis. For example, the Center for Media Freedom and Responsibility (CMFR) has highlighted needs for greater depth in disaster reporting, suggesting that emotional appeals sometimes overshadow broader causal accountability. Outlets like , which maintain a progressive editorial lens potentially influencing their scrutiny of establishment figures, have argued that seasoned hosts like Sanchez should adhere more strictly to ethical boundaries in platforming subjects, implying risks of softened critique on institutional failures. Audience responses reflect a divide, with supporters valuing the program's unvarnished portrayals of personal responsibility in success stories—such as rags-to-riches profiles—as and motivational, fostering broader appeal through relatable, outcome-focused content. Detractors, often aligned with mainstream critiques, contend that this emphasis on individual narratives evinces a conservative-leaning that underplays structural determinants, though such views coexist with evidence of the show's sustained industry validation via awards. This split underscores the tension between the show's causal realism in highlighting verifiable personal paths and demands for more institutionally critical angles from left-leaning commentators.

Controversies and Criticisms

2013 Remarks

On November 13, 2013, during her radio program Rated Korina, criticized anchor Anderson Cooper's on-the-ground reporting from City in the aftermath of (known locally as Yolanda), which had struck the on November 8, killing thousands and displacing millions. Sanchez remarked that Cooper "didn't know what he was talking about," accusing him of portraying the absence of government presence in Tacloban as absolute and likening his coverage to a dramatic film scene, while suggesting he appeared like a mere "tourist" unfamiliar with local realities. Her comments echoed contemporaneous concerns from Philippine officials, including President , who argued that some foreign media reports exaggerated the death toll and chaos to criticize the government's response, potentially to pressure for more international . The remarks triggered immediate backlash from Filipino s and online commentators, who accused Sanchez of downplaying the disaster's severity and insensitivity toward victims, with amplifying calls for her accountability and labeling her tone as dismissive of evident humanitarian needs in and provinces. Coverage in outlets like , which had been critical of the Aquino administration's disaster handling, highlighted the controversy and netizen outrage, contributing to its viral spread. responded directly on that evening, clarifying he had not claimed zero government presence but had reported on logistical challenges, overwhelmed resources, and the urgent need for scaled-up aid, while inviting Sanchez to visit herself to assess conditions. Sanchez's perspective drew from reports of on-site observations indicating that initial foreign media estimates of casualties—such as police projections exceeding 10,000 deaths in alone—overstated the scale compared to emerging ground assessments, a view later supported by downward revisions in official figures. The National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council (NDRRMC) ultimately confirmed 6,283 deaths nationwide, with President Aquino estimating around 2,500 by , far below the tens of thousands feared in early hype-driven narratives that emphasized apocalyptic scenarios. While Cooper's reporting accurately conveyed the typhoon's unprecedented winds (up to 315 km/h) and widespread destruction—leveling 90% of structures—the controversy underscored tensions between localized insights and international coverage, where sensational elements risked inflating perceptions beyond verified data. The incident resulted in short-term professional repercussions, including a brief absence from airwaves reported by some outlets as a suspension for unethical commentary, though did not officially confirm this, and Sanchez resumed without program cancellation. Politicized elements, including Sanchez's to Interior Secretary —a key figure in —fueled perceptions of in the amplified from opposition-leaning media and online spheres, yet the episode highlighted resilience amid outrage cycles driven more by viral sentiment than sustained institutional fallout.

Perceptions of Bias and Journalistic Integrity

Criticisms of Rated Korina often center on perceived conflicts of interest stemming from host Korina Sanchez's marriage to , a former Liberal Party senator and presidential candidate, which detractors argue compromises the program's neutrality in covering political topics. During the Aquino administration, when Roxas served as Interior Secretary from 2012 to 2015, outlets like GetRealPhilippines questioned Sanchez's ability to report impartially on government matters, citing instances where her commentary on her radio counterpart to the show alluded to political rivals in ways that aligned with Liberal Party narratives. Similarly, in 2013, Commission on Elections chair Sixto Brillantes accused Sanchez of selectively platforming critics of the poll body without affording equal airtime to defenders, suggesting an slant that favored opposition voices during coverage. More recent debates have intensified around journalistic integrity, particularly allegations that the show blurs lines between features and paid promotions, potentially prioritizing commercial viability over . In August 2025, Mayor publicly claimed that interviews on Rated Korina and related programs required a PHP 10 million fee for favorable coverage, referencing a feature on the Discaya family amid their political ambitions, which the show's producers denied as unfounded while defending their content as standard lifestyle reporting rather than political advocacy. Critics, including commentators and ethics watchdogs, viewed this as emblematic of broader pressures on Philippine media to monetize access, eroding public trust in the program's independence from political or financial influences. Defenders of Rated Korina highlight its adherence to production standards and multi-perspective sourcing as evidence of balanced reporting, pointing to awards from credible bodies for storytelling that avoids overt partisanship. The has repeatedly asserted that features emphasize factual narratives over "hit pieces" or vanity promotions, with Sanchez herself crediting the show's format for fostering accountability through direct interviews across the , including figures like Duterte ally Senator in October 2025 discussions on . Proponents argue this approach counters systemic biases in mainstream outlets by prioritizing viewer engagement with real-world impacts, though skeptics from progressive circles contend it occasionally amplifies personal agency narratives at the expense of systemic critiques, subtly aligning with liberal emphases on individual resilience amid government shortfalls. Perceptions remain polarized, with liberal-leaning audiences praising the humanitarian focus in human interest segments as a corrective to dry policy reporting, while conservative viewers appreciate its occasional pushback against victimhood tropes in favor of stories. However, surveys and commentary underscore ongoing public wariness, with a 2025 Social Weather Stations poll indicating only 45% trust in Philippine news media's neutrality, a figure that Rated Korina navigates amid accusations from both Duterte supporters and progressive officials of selective framing tied to Sanchez's elite networks.

Legacy and Impact

Awards and Recognitions

Rated K, the foundational iteration of the program that later became Rated Korina, secured the Best Magazine Show award at the 29th PMPC Star Awards for Television in 2015. Host Korina Sanchez earned the Best Magazine Show Host distinction for Rated K at the 33rd PMPC Star Awards in 2019, with the program itself also winning Best Magazine Show that year. Earlier, at the 31st PMPC Star Awards in 2017, Sanchez received the Best Magazine Show Host award for her work on the series. In the Kapisanan ng mga Brodkaster ng Pilipinas (KBP) Golden Dove Awards, Sanchez was honored as Best TV Program Host for Rated K in both 2008 and 2013, recognizing the program's factual reporting segments amid competitive Philippine broadcast standards. The series also garnered a for Outstanding Magazine Program at the 2014 Golden Screen TV Awards. Following the 2020 rebranding to Rated Korina and shift to alternative broadcast platforms after ABS-CBN's regulatory challenges, documented awards have been limited, primarily nominations for Sanchez as Best Magazine Show Host at the 37th in 2025. This scarcity aligns with structural disruptions in the network's operations rather than shifts in content quality. Sanchez's overall contributions, including those from Rated Korina segments, contributed to her PMPC Excellence in Broadcasting Lifetime Achievement Award in 2021.

Influence on Philippine Television Journalism

Rated Korina's format, emphasizing in-depth profiles of ordinary overcoming adversity through personal agency and resilience, helped elevate human-interest within Philippine television by modeling narrative-driven reporting grounded in verifiable personal accounts rather than unsubstantiated . Launched on May 30, 2004, the program distinguished itself from contemporaneous sensationalist coverage by focusing on empirical stories of individual triumph, such as entrepreneurs rising from or communities self-organizing post-disaster, which contrasted with prevailing emphases on systemic victim narratives in some outlets. This approach garnered sustained high ratings, leading its Sunday evening slot for over a decade, and prompted emulation in competitor formats that incorporated similar data-backed, uplifting elements to capture audience preference for substantive content. The show's production standards, including on-location investigations and multi-source verification for features, set a benchmark for magazine-style , influencing networks like GMA to expand investigative segments in programs such as , which adopted extended personal narratives post-2004 to compete in the genre. Critics from establishment media circles occasionally faulted Rated Korina for eschewing politically aligned framing—such as prioritizing state culpability over individual initiative in social issues—highlighting its role in resisting dilutions toward ideologically driven interpretations. This resistance fostered a niche for empirical, agency-oriented reporting amid broader trends of declining trust in opinion-heavy broadcasts, as evidenced by the program's eight wins for Best Magazine Show at the between 2005 and 2019. Over its 16-year run until 2020, Rated Korina contributed to a modest diversification in TV journalism practices, with post-launch data showing increased adoption of resilience-focused stories across channels, correlating with viewer shifts away from purely adversarial or victim-centric angles toward those promoting self-reliance. Its legacy persists in maintaining audience faith in fact-based television features, even as overall media credibility faced erosion from partisan influences in mainstream institutions.

References

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