One Piece in the Philippines

One Piece
GMA Network, one of the two TV network giants in the Philippines, acquired license to dub One Piece episodes in Filipino, the national language of the Philippines, and broadcast them.

Contrary to most other anime already shown in the Philippines, One Piece was dubbed straight from Japanese and not from available English dubs. The first Philippine run of One Piece happened in 2002 and covered up to the whole Baroque Works saga. It was rerun several times since then with each rerun covering the next major arc. Most of these reruns had started from the very first episode.

Like most of other anime showed in the Philippines, One Piece was run 5 episodes a week. Its latest rerun shows the Enies Lobby arc. One Piece is normally slotted between 4:30-5:30pm, making students (elementary to college) able to watch it (Philippine schools normally end classes by 4pm) but as the newest rerun it is slotted at 10:30-11:00am. GMA7 never skipped any single episode One Piece has. It showed all including filler episodes. It is also slotted at 5:00-5:30pm, after Slum Dunk. Presently, it is slotted Monday to Friday at 9:30-10:00am, after Shaman King and 9:00-9:30am at Saturday. Lately, this april 2012, it was rerun with the first episode, which was from 9:30-10:00am.

Popularity
At first, One Piece received poor ratings in the Philippines. This might be because GMA7's rival network, ABS-CBN, managed to show other anime like Naruto, Samurai X, Get Backers and Card Captor Sakura which received unparalleled high ratings from viewers. Because One Piece is a long anime series, it is obvious that most viewers will not watch it completely on the first run. One Piece popularity even lower, with most viewers not getting the flow of story at all. However, GMA7 continued to rerun it.

The latest rerun of One Piece received high ratings, achieving more than 10% on average compared to 12-15% ratings got by ABS-CBN's.

The Philippine dubbed series currently features the Thriller Bark Arc.

Trivia

 * Luffy's common way of saying "amazing" when he is amused with something was given more emphasis for Filipino fans using the same meaning in Tagalog (astig!) in a catchy way of saying it.
 * Gomu-Gomu is dubbed to rubber which is Goma in the Philippines, so it is called Goma-Goma. (e.g Gomu-Gomu no Pistol is dubbed into Goma-Goma Pistol.)