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News, comment and analysis on Spain, Portugal and beyond

spanish news

Ferran Adrià’s lavish tale sates our curiosity, but not our appetite

February 16, 2012 by James Blick Leave a Comment

The food world was startled when Spanish uber-chef Ferran Adrià announced that El Bulli, his temple to haut cuisine and five-times best restaurant in the world, would be serving its last mind-bending supper in July 2011. Although dispensing with the diners might seem an odd move for a chef, it makes sense after watching German director Gereon Wetzel’s documentary El Bulli: Cooking in Progress. Shot from 2008 to 2009, the film is a year in the life of Adrià and his chefs. And it portrays a chef-cum-artist for whom the logical next step is his proposed culinary think tank (due to open in 2014), rather than a restaurant that serves dinner. The film opens as the whitewashed El Bulli, sunk … [Read more...] about Ferran Adrià’s lavish tale sates our curiosity, but not our appetite

Filed Under: Culture, Featured, Spain News Tagged With: Adria, chef, el bulli, El Bulli: Cooking in Progress, ferran adria, film, Gereon Wetzel, spain, spain chef, spain food, spain news, spanish food, spanish news

La Liga: Real Madrid’s lead leaves Barcelona fighting for honour

February 14, 2012 by Halima Ali 2 Comments

Barcelona must keep fighting, said Dani Alves on Monday, “it’s a question of honour, of prestige” - but most likely no longer a question of the Liga title. Mid-February is perhaps too early for the race for top spot to be over, and of course it isn’t yet, but the 10-point gap that separates Real Madrid from the reigning European and Spanish champions now seems too big for Barça to close. Following a defeat to city rivals Espanyol on their return to action after the winter break, Pep Guardiola repeatedly stated his side could no longer afford to slip up. Their margin of error was gone but still they dropped points, away against Villarreal, and this weekend in Pamplona. In freezing … [Read more...] about La Liga: Real Madrid’s lead leaves Barcelona fighting for honour

Filed Under: Spain News, Sports Tagged With: Barça, barcelona, Barcelona and Real Madrid, Champions League, cristiano ronaldo, football, José Mourinho, la liga, Liga, madrid, Messi, Mourinho, Real Madrid, soccer, spain, Spain football, spain news, spain soccer, spanish football, spanish news, Spanish news in English, Spanish soccer

The importance of being ‘El País’

February 14, 2012 by Guy Hedgecoe 1 Comment

One of my clearest memories from the years I spent working at the English edition of El País newspaper was a 6pm editorial meeting in 2007, the day of the launch of rival publication Público. These evening meetings are when the paper’s section heads tell editor-in-chief Javier Moreno what they are going to publish. I remember them as dull but rather tense affairs, where each head would deliver his (it was almost always a man) spiel, and hope not to have it verbally machine-gunned by the boss. But on this particular occasion, Moreno began the meeting with an appraisal of new arrival Público. “Whatever else one might think, they have a very clear idea of Spain and who their readers are,” he … [Read more...] about The importance of being ‘El País’

Filed Under: Featured, Iberoblog Tagged With: Al Pacino, Assange, el pais, Financial Times, Julian Assange, publico, spain, spain economy, spain media, spain news, spain news in english, spain newspapers, spain politics, spanish media, spanish news, spanish politics, wikileaks, York Times

Jobless in Spain: a personal viewpoint

February 10, 2012 by Olwen Mears 1 Comment

In January of this year, I became one of Spain's five million unemployed. The redundancy in itself has not hurt me badly. I receive a decent monthly unemployment benefit (with entitlement for 16 months) and, on a personal level at least, must admit to being pleased that my husband is one of Spain's 2.5 million job-protected funcionarios. The circumstances surrounding my redundancy, though not atypical, were legally ambiguous. “Ambiguous” because I had been hired to work until the completion of an unspecified project (or 'Fin de Obra') under what remains to date the most common type of contract in Spain. As I was hired in 2009, more than two years prior to recent changes in … [Read more...] about Jobless in Spain: a personal viewpoint

Filed Under: Featured, Iberoblog, Spain News Tagged With: labour market, Partido Popular, rajoy, spain, spain crisis, spain economy, spain labor reform, Spain labour reform, spain news, spain unemployment, spanish economy, spanish news

Getting to the bottom of Spain’s daunting unemployment rate

February 8, 2012 by Christopher Coats 3 Comments

Of the many bits of bad economic news Spain has received this past year, including finding deficits were higher than expected and growth rates much lower, perhaps no other figure has proven as weighty and daunting as the country’s unemployment rate. Reports released at the end of January saw that number rise to 22.9 percent, adding another dismal headline to the Rajoy government’s first full month in office: nearly 5.3 million people out of work with declines in available positions across the board, from services to the country’s still collapsing construction sector. Capturing the dour outlook of the country’s current situation, The Atlantic’s Derek Thompson summarized the statistics … [Read more...] about Getting to the bottom of Spain’s daunting unemployment rate

Filed Under: Business, Featured, Spain News Tagged With: Europe, greece, Mariano Rajoy, portugal, rajoy, spain, spain 22.9 percent, spain crisis, spain economy, spain jobless, spain news, spain politics, spain unemployment, spanish economy, spanish news, unemployment

Back to the future with Rubalcaba

February 5, 2012 by Guy Hedgecoe 1 Comment

Unity, strength and change were the basis of Alfredo Pérez Rubalcaba’s rallying cry on winning the Spanish Socialist Party primary by the slimmest of margins on Saturday. But unity currently looks a tall order for the party, given that its 900 or so delegates were divided almost exactly down the middle in choosing Rubalcaba over Carme Chacón. And it can hardly daw on much strength, either, following its record losses in local and general elections in 2011. Rubalcaba himself was the candidate who suffered the general election loss, the Socialists’ worst in the democratic era, and it is now he who has been chosen to pick up the pieces and redefine the party. So change it is. What that … [Read more...] about Back to the future with Rubalcaba

Filed Under: Iberoblog Tagged With: austerity plan, economy, elections, Mariano Rajoy, Partido Popular, popular party, rubalcaba, spain, spain economy, spain news, spain politics, spanish news, spanish politics, spanish socialist party, zapatero

Spain’s film dubbing: ghost of a fascist past must be laid to rest

February 2, 2012 by Olwen Mears 19 Comments

Most ex-patriots living and working in Spain will be all too aware of the Spanish penchant for dubbing foreign-language films. Whether Spanish-speaking or not, this is enormously irritating, particularly for those of us not living in more cosmopolitan cities like Madrid or Barcelona, with more cinemas showing films in original version. The nearest big city to me is San Sebastián, which hosts an annual international film festival famed for its predilection for the avant-garde. Throughout the festival, all showings are in original version and San Sebastián is extremely proud of its cinematic culture. Yet after almost 60 years of hosting the event, there is still only one small, two-screen … [Read more...] about Spain’s film dubbing: ghost of a fascist past must be laid to rest

Filed Under: Culture, Featured, Films, IberoArts, Spain News Tagged With: film, film dubbing, Inglourious Basterds, meryl streep, san sebastian film festival, spain, Spain cinema, spain news, Spanish cinema, spanish news, the iron lady

Amar y Vivir

January 31, 2012 by Anthony Steyning Leave a Comment

The Great Inquisition did nothing for the Church, it led to Protestantism, to separation between Church and State and to a work ethic celebrating reconciliation and collaboration that became the precursor of modern western society and all its wealth. Japan’s infliction of terrible horrors led not only to its inevitable defeat, but indirectly to its ultimate wealth. (America wrote its Constitution!) Germany’s idiotic pre-war dreams about domination led not only directly to its defeat but to wealth attributable as much to production as to enforced tolerance. (America wrote its Constitution!) Franco’s cruel Spain did everything wrong, creating a nation the exact opposite of what he … [Read more...] about Amar y Vivir

Filed Under: Iberoblog Tagged With: Anthony Steyning, Constitution, germany, guerra civil, Marilyn Monroe, spain, spain franco, spain history, spain news, spanish civil war, spanish news

Even Spanish TV feels the pain

January 30, 2012 by Nick Lyne Leave a Comment

As part of swingeing spending cuts being implemented at the behest of the European Central Bank, the Spanish government is to slash state broadcaster RTVE’s budget this year by €200 million to €1.2 billion. RTVE’s board says the cuts will have a “devastating impact” on its programming, predicting that its audience figures for its two channels La 1 and La 2, will drop by 8 percent. La 1 frequently tops audience ratings thanks to hugely popular programs such as Cuéntame como pasó — a long-running drama telling the story of a family from the Franco era up to the present day— or fantasy saga Águila roja, and post-Civil War soap opera Amar en tiempos revueltos. But the channel says that the … [Read more...] about Even Spanish TV feels the pain

Filed Under: Business, Featured, Spain News Tagged With: eurozone crisis, rajoy, RTVE, spain, spain budget deficit, spain debt, spain economy, spain news, spain politics, spain tv, spanish civil war, spanish economy, spanish news, Spanish TV

Valencia’s Camps is off the hook, but something still smells rotten

January 27, 2012 by Guy Hedgecoe Leave a Comment

Francisco Camps has reason to celebrate. The Popular Party’s former president of the Valencia region has been absolved of charges of taking bribes in the form of designer suits and other garments from a businessman at the heart of the Gürtel corruption scandal. After a two-week trial, the jury voted, five votes to four, that the accusations could not be proved. But while Camps has expressed his joy at defeating the conspiracy he says was behind this case, his own party has been less jubilant. Virtually all the senior party figures who have responded to the verdict have advised Camps to take a break from politics, from Valencia mayor Rita Barberá to Alberto Fabra, his successor as regional … [Read more...] about Valencia’s Camps is off the hook, but something still smells rotten

Filed Under: Featured, Iberoblog Tagged With: Francisco Camps, PP, rajoy, scandal, spain, spain corruption, spain economy, spain news, spain politics, spanish economy, spanish news, spanish politics, Valencia

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