Floods, landslides, 100+mph sustained winds and a boxing training camp. HBO's Emmy award winning 24/7 reality tv-series follows the two boxers as they prepare for their fights.
Scheduled for Nov. 14, Pacquiao aims for an unprecedented and historic 7th weight class world title at 147lbs (he used to fight at 112lbs), while Cotto seeks confirmation of his welterweight supremacy after the "doubtful" Margarito(cheater!) loss.

And dont forget, U.S. Marines in Action (in the Philippines) will be in the show. It's the Katrina disaster, only southeast asian style and no cussing on t.v., no armed gangs, or widespread looting.
Instead, a people's resilience, faith and fortitude in the face of constant adversity and crippling poverty will be showcased. Definitely worth your time!
Please watch!
HBO shows typhoon's grim reality
Updated 15h 26m ago
http://www.usatoday.com/SPORTS/usaedition/2009-10-23-hbo23_ST_U.htm?csp=usat.me
Weekend watch
TV reality shows generally come from controlled – usually artificial – environments.
But even reality shows are not immune to, well, reality.
Like HBO's 24/7 boxing reality series, which focuses on boxers Manny Pacquiao and Miguel Cotto training for their Nov. 14 pay-per-view HBO fight. As the series debuts Saturday (10:15 p.m. ET) viewers won't just see speed bags being pummeled – there's also footage of U.S. Marines riding to the rescue of typhoon victims.
Producer Scott Boggins and his crew were filming Pacquiao, who previously has prepped for fights in Hollywood, training in Baguio City in his native Philippines when the high-altitude town – inaccessible by commercial flights and an eight- to 10-hour mountainous drive from Manila– was hit by deadly Typhoon Parma this month.
Pacquiao continued his training routine, Boggins says, but after "nonstop, monsoon-like rain for several days, it started to hit us something was going on." Like when the road to the gym was flooded out and "we saw complete neighborhoods underwater."
Boggins says Pacquiao kept training – substituting running in a swimming pool after roadwork became impossible – "and kept his focus."
As the weather cleared Oct. 11 and the HBO crew tried to get a flight out, they were met by U.S. Marine helicopters flying with in with food aid. Says Boggins: "We were all taken aback, a little weepy. Those Marines were great."
– Michael Hiestand
