Posts Tagged madrid

Buy two bananas, get your stash free!

The ultimate discountLidl’s is giving away free cocaine with every bunch of bananas.

Well, not quite. Seems the drug dealers bid on the wrong lot at auction, leaving the cocaine filled bananas to be bought by Lidl’s in Madrid and distributed to stores across the region. Ha!

http://www.thereader.es/en/spain-news-stories/1432-cocaine-free-with-lidl-bananas.html

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New air route to Madrid and Barcelona announced

http://www.thereader.es/en/local-business-a-finance/303-new-airline-starts-59-return-trips-daily-to-madrid.html

€59 return? That ain’t bad. Perfect for tourists who otherwise can’t get here in the winter. Fly to Madrid, change, fly onwards. Twice daily. Later Barcelona.

Not too sure about them using some strange Brazilian plane made in Seville… Still, no extra charge for luggage and the seats are promised to be comfy.

Amazing how the Junta doesn’t mind throwing money into a rat hole, as long as the rat is Andaluz. (The carrier is Andalus Air, an Andalucian airline that is getting plenty of government money spent on it to make Andalucia play with the big boys. Catalunya has SpanAir, Madrid has Iberia, Valencia has Air Nostrum, now we have Andalus. True, we fly small Brazilian jets rather than anything big and modern, but at least bits of them are made -and presumably will drop off- in Seville. Still better than those prop planes -one step up from bi-planes- that Nostrum uses).

I notice one of the backers of Andalus is Mr. Cosentino, Almería’s most succesful businessman who has often complained about not being able to get to Madrid without leaving Andalucia.

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Ryanair to start Almeria – Madrid route as from 14th July

Ryanair has announced that it is to start a three times a week (Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays) service between Almeria and Madrid (Barajas) as from the 14th of July.

This is in conjunction with the new Almeria – Dusseldorf route which the company announced would also start flying in July.

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Manuel Chaves to quit as President of Andalucía

President-for-life Manuel Chaves is to leave his position as President of Andalucía, and will take up an important position in the central Government, as head of Territorial Organisation, and as one of three new Vice Presidents Zapatero is creating.

After 19 years in the job, he is handing over to Nº2 – José Antonio Griñán.

ZP is expected to announce a major cabinet reshuffle next Tuesday, when he will remove current Finance Minister Solbes and replace him with Elena Salgado. He will also create two new “Vice President” posts, which means he will have three deputies: current VP María Teresa Fernández de la Vega, Chaves & Salgado.

Frankly, I’m stunned. It’s obviously the first step towards him running for President of Spain.

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Why the press coverage of the Madrid Disaster shocks us

 The Anglo in Hispanic blogosphere (http://www.notesfromspain.com/2008/08/25/morbo-spanish-news-media-horror/, http://southofwatford.blogspot.com/2008/08/madrid-airport-accidentthe-reactions.html, and other) has been buzzing with suggestions that the Spanish media coverage of the Madrid Air Disaster is because of some unique Spanish trait.

Well, I disagree. I don’t think it’s because of a TV programme in the 90’s, or because of pent up frustration after the Franco years or because of a uniquely Iberian curiosity towards death and destruction.

I think it’s a perfectly normal attempt by the press to cover all angles of an accident that has shocked the nation. I think that you could say that the French, or German, or Italian media would cover it in the same way. It’s a normal coverage of the personal stages of shock, as defined in psychology, and modified by the laws of the nation.

In the beginning, we had the shock. The photos, the 24 hours coverage of the smoke, the survivors.

Then, once the judicial process had begun (remember that Spanish law insists that the process be secret until finalised, this is not unique in this case and is demanded by law) and the photos and stories could no longer by published, we see the natural curiosity of the press unleashed. We see how they, muzzled as they are by Judge David, attempt to approach the story from all angles in order to bring closure to a grieving nation.

We then see the anger phase. The press (and readers) demand satisfaction. Was it Spanair’s fault? The governments? The Air ministry? Who? WHO? WHEN WILL WE HAVE ANSWERS? WHAT ARE YOU HIDING?

The next step, once the government releases the results of its investigation, will first be skeptical (coming to terms), then finally acceptance, then release. Always assuming no scandal is uncovered along the way.

Of course, in Britain, we are… perhaps inhibited is not the word. Our mentality, our mindset, the whole idea of “stiff upper lip” is still, albeit subconsciously, foremost in our newspapers minds. So when such papers as the Sun release their pent up emotions they do it in a torrent of fury and emotion.

Which is, as a nation, the healthiest outlet? Well, I don’t think the whole concept of “judicial secrecy” helps matters here in Spain. It causes the bottling up of the grieving and curiosity phases, which results in morbid photos, wild accusations, political intrigue and all the rest. Which we, are British, cannot comprehend, but in its own small way helps the public to make sense of the tragic, tragic accident.

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