The Philippines has a robust independent film and web series scene. “Filipina Trike Patrol” sounds like a potential title for a comedy-action or drama series on platforms like YouTube or iWantTFC. “39” could be the episode number. “Globe Twatters” might be the production company or a parody of “Globe” as a sponsor and “Twatters” as the show’s fictional social media agency.
Check: No known series matches this exactly, but in 2023, a small studio called Trikehouse Productions released a pilot called “Patrol Inasnan” (Salty Patrol), which fans nicknamed “Trike Patrol 39” due to a scene with 39 tricycles. The fandom on Twitter called themselves “Twatters” as a pun.
Rather than correct the typo, the “Globe Twatters” embraced it. They turned the broken keyword into a multilayered meme: Filipina Trike Patrol 39 -Globe Twatters- -2023...
The phrase trended locally on X (Twitter) for three days in October 2023, even drawing a puzzled response from the official Globe Telecom account: “We love the creativity, but what is a Twatter? 😅”
In the Philippines, “Globe Twatters” (often misspelled intentionally as “Twatters” to mock poor signal and scrambled words) is an inside joke. It refers to Twitter users—typically young, hyper-online, and perpetually frustrated—who suffer from Globe’s notorious data slowdowns. Their tweets are known to double-post, autocorrect strangely, and drop letters. The Philippines has a robust independent film and
On September 15, 2023, a user with the handle @kwek2x_patrol attempted to tweet:
“Grabe, ang astig ng Filipina Trike Patrol sa Barangay 39. Sana lahat ng barangay meron. #GlobeUsers” The phrase trended locally on X (Twitter) for
But due to a classic “Globe lag spike” and iOS autocorrect failure, the tweet posted as:
“Filipina Trike Patrol 39 -Globe Twatters- -2023 pls RT”
The tweet froze for seven seconds, then duplicated itself three times. Within an hour, it had been screenshotted, memed, and reposted by over 2,000 accounts—not for its content, but for its surreal syntax.