Chito maintains the lola’s boy aesthetic—tropical shirts, slippers, and dad caps. Neri, on the other hand, oscillates between Rich Aunty core (Chanel bags, sleek dresses) and Nanay mode (cycling shorts, rubber shoes, and a cap covering no-makeup days). This duality is aspirational; it tells their followers that you can be a hands-on parent and buy yourself a Birkin.

Neri’s podcast is the flip side of the coin. It focuses on mom-entrepeneur life. She interviews fellow celebrity moms, gives financial advice, and sometimes cries about the guilt of working too hard. It is therapeutic content that builds a deep parasocial relationship with her followers.

Their lifestyle is a constant negotiation of time. One night, Neri is packing sunscreen orders in a warehouse; the next, she is backstage at a Parokya concert, handing Chito his guitar pick. Entertainment for them isn't a job—it’s the air they breathe. Part 2: The Lifestyle Aesthetic – #FamilyFirst, But Make It Luxe Scrolling through their social media feeds reveals a curated but chaotic portrait of upper-middle-class Filipino life.