Pinay Celebrity | Scandalaramina Exclusive

Beyond her personal life, Pinay celebrity Aramina is a shrewd businesswoman. Her influence on the entertainment sector is palpable. She recently launched "Araw-Nina Productions," a boutique film outfit focused on psychological thrillers and period dramas.

Aramina is not just a face on a teleserye. She has quietly become a producer—her company Ara Creative Labs has co-produced two Cinema One originals and a digital series shot entirely on an iPhone 16 Pro.

But her most talked-about entertainment move? The "Late Checkout" podcast —exclusive to a paid membership platform—where she interviews one celebrity per episode, no PR handlers, no topic bans. Recent episodes have gone viral (and then been deleted) for raw conversations about mental health, failed relationships, and industry "utang na loob." pinay celebrity scandalaramina exclusive

“Entertainment isn’t just about giving people an escape,” she explains. “It’s about making them feel seen. Even the messy parts.”

She also hosts quarterly "Aramina’s Living Room Sessions" —unannounced, 50-seat acoustic nights in intimate venues like 12 Monkeys or Commune. Tickets sell out in 90 seconds. No phones allowed inside. Just voice, guitar, and poetry. Beyond her personal life, Pinay celebrity Aramina is


Unlike the high-intensity HIIT workouts popular among other celebs, Aramina swears by Classical Pilates and Ashtanga yoga. She trains privately at a studio in Salcedo Village, often accompanied by her two rescued aspins, “Sinta” and “Diwa.” Her diet, curated by a nutritionist from The Medical City, focuses on plant-based meals with sustainable seafood—think jackfruit adobo and coconut-curry tanigue.

Unlike many celebrities who rotate stylists every taping, Aramina’s fashion is a signature—bought, borrowed, or vintage. She is frequently spotted in Filipino-first designers like Rajo Laurel, Vania Romoff, and emerging talent from the School of Fashion and the Arts (SoFA). Unlike the high-intensity HIIT workouts popular among other

Her "exclusive" hack? Direct-to-designer fittings held not in a studio, but in her own walk-in closet—champagne in hand, fitting edits live on a private Instagram broadcast channel (now with 45k members, by invitation only).

“I don’t do ‘What’s trending.’ I do ‘What feels like me.’” she says, pulling out a reworked terno made from scrap piña fabric—an ensemble that won her best-dressed at the last Star Magic Ball without a single press release.

Recent flex: A Hermès Birkin, yes—but customized with a sablay pattern from her alma mater. “That’s the story,” she says. “Not the bag. The sapin.”