Argentinean restaurant Casa Malevo in London’s Connaught Village since 22nd October 2010

New London restaurant Casa Malevo opening later this month

by Newsdesk – Monday October 11, 2010 11:59 am

The restaurant is a joint venture between renowned chef Diego Jacquet and restauranteur Alberto Abbate which aims to showcase Argentina’s food and culture.

Apparently the aim of new London restaurant Casa Malevo is to “offer honest and truthful cocina Argentina (Argentinean cuisine) while exploring the different regions of the country, from Patagonia to Salta, the Pampas to Mendoza.”

The menu is set to include empanadas, mollejas al verdeo (grilled sweetbreads with spring onions, bacon and lemon), fabulous Argentine beef and for dessert, dulce de leche crème brulée with “banana Split” ice cream.

Between them Alberto Abbate and chef Diego Jacquet have plenty of experience under their belts; Jacquet has worked at Ferran Adria’s El Bulli, Aquavit in New York and most recently, The Trafalgar and Zetter hotels in London, whilst Abbate has almost 30 years experience in the hospitality industry and is also the man behind Santa Maria del Sur, runner up for best local restaurant in Gordon Ramsay’s The F word.

Jacquet appears to be beside himself with excitement over Casa Malevo, saying “I have spent the past 15 years cooking at some of the most exciting restaurants in the world with some fantastic chefs – but I do miss the food of my homeland. It has always been my dream to open an authentic Argentine restaurant and when this opportunity arose I had to jump at it.”

Expect to get an authentic taste of Argentinean food, wine and culture when this new london restaurant opens in 2010!

www.casamalevo.com

Hoy, museos hasta la madrugada. Buenos Aires!

 

Sábado 12 de noviembre de 2011 | Publicado en edición impresa LA NACION

Gran fiesta cultural / Actividades en 27 barrios porteños

Hoy, museos hasta la madrugada

Entre las 20 y las 3, habrá 174 instituciones abiertas al público en forma gratuita; se trata de una cifra récord

La cultura será hoy la gran protagonista, con la ya tradicional Noche de los Museos, que en esta oportunidad tendrá una cifra récord: participarán 174 instituciones y espacios culturales, que estarán abiertos al público en forma gratuita entre las 20 y las 3.

La 8a. edición incorporará a varias instituciones, como el Colegio Nacional Buenos Aires, el Teatro Colón, la Catedral de Buenos Aires, el Museo de Arte Moderno de Buenos Aires y el Zoo de Buenos Aires.

Organizada por el Ministerio de Cultura de la ciudad, serán 27 los barrios porteños que realizarán cientos de actividades. Además, 85 líneas de colectivos se sumarán a la fiesta y trasladarán en forma gratuita a los pasajeros que presenten el comprobante de Pase Libre, que puede imprimirse en www.lanochedelosmuseos.gob.ar , página oficial del evento, donde figura también el cronograma completo de actividades.

En el año en que Buenos Aires es la Capital Mundial de Libro (elegida por la Unesco), se realizarán numerosos homenajes a los escritores argentinos. En el acto de inauguración oficial el destinatario será Jorge Luis Borges. A las 20, frente a la Casa de la Cultura (Avenida de Mayo 575) se realizará el concierto Borges y Piazzolla-El tango, interpretado por Julia Zenko. La artista recreará el repertorio del disco que Borges y Piazzolla grabaron juntos, del que se hallaron las partituras originales.

Los museos de la ciudad serán el escenario para que poetas y músicos desplieguen su arte. Además, una espectacular “Lluvia de luces y música sobre el Riachuelo” podrá verse desde las 20 en el puente Nicolás Avellaneda, que será intervenido por varios artistas y que promete ser una “experiencia sensorial única”. Allí se colgarán lámparas del puente y se iluminará el Riachuelo con decenas de botes que desplegarán velas sobre el agua.

A partir de las 21, en la Facultad de Derecho de la Universidad de Buenos Aires (Av. Figueroa Alcorta 2263), se proyectará un mapping sobre el edificio y participarán del evento La Bomba del Tiempo y la compañía de danza de Brenda Angiel. En la Plaza de Mayo, la propuesta será recrear parte de la historia porteña con la celebración popular, al estilo de 1810, de la fiesta del patrono de Buenos Aires, San Martín de Tours.

El emblema del barrio de Mataderos, el cine La Plata, será protagonista esta noche y se realizarán ante sus puertas actividades al aire libre y la proyección de películas. A las 23, Gabo Ferro y Pablo Ramos realizarán un concierto en la sede de la Dirección de Museos (en Avenida de los Italianos 851). Al finalizar el show, se llevará a cabo un encuentro musical con el periodista Bobby Flores, que oficiará de DJ hasta el cierre de esta 8a. edición.

Para los más pequeños, La Noche de los Museos será una excusa para posponer la hora de irse a la cama. Se realizarán para ellos talleres, espectáculos de títeres, música, danza y sombras, relatos de cuentos y visitas guiadas a los distintos museos.

Como si fuera poco, el municipio de Vicente de Vicente López ha creado Las Noches Hermanas y ofrecerá también numerosas propuestas culturales.

Los organizadores de la fiesta que busca homenajear a las personalidades de la cultura y a los ciudadanos porteños consideran que este año se superarán los 600.000 visitantes recibidos en la última edición. Con una nutrida agenda de actividades y propuestas para todas las edades en numerosos barrios, la cita de esta noche promete ser imperdible.

174
Museos y espacios culturales

Ofrecerán espectáculos y actividades en forma gratuita.

27
Barrios porteños

Serán el escenario de una noche dedicada a la cultura.

20 a 3
El horario

Se realizarán cientos de actividades durante ocho horas.

85
Líneas de colectivos

Presentando el Pase Libre, se podrá viajar por la ciudad gratis.

Agencia Reuters y diario El País .

 

How to travel with friends (and not want to kill them)

Jun 22, 2011 10:45:36 AM

How to travel with friends (and not want to kill them)

  • Leif Pettersen
  • Lonely Planet Author
Two men sleeping on bench on Champs-Elysees.
View gallery

I have two permanent, oddly positioned bald spots on my head. Though my mother claims they’re from a scalp thing I had as a kid, I have it on good authority from my oracle that they’re probably where the Martians attached the electrodes.

However, spontaneous balding frequently has nothing to do with alien abduction. I’ve encountered many wretched travelers with unexplained bald spots formed during particularly challenging trips with incompatible friends. Whether they yanked that hair out during angry sleep or they were shaved by their vindictive companions is extraneous. What’s important is this hair-loss could have been easily avoided if these people had honestly communicated their travel styles and priorities during the trip planning stages.

Even your closest friend of 20 years, who saved your dog with mouth-to-mouth and donated a kidney to your sister (or vice-versa), can sometimes drive you to a stuttering rage while on the road. The divergent day-to-day circumstances of travel can expose and magnify irritations and disparities you never knew existed. And that’s if you’re compatible. If you’re not compatible, sooner or later that corkscrew you packed may be used for removing things its designers never intended.

Countless tent-pole duels to the death might have been prevented with pre-trip contemplation and dialogues. Some of the more pertinent criteria to consider in advance include:

1. Natural selection

Spontaneity during travel is great, but not so much when selecting a travel companion. Pick a friend whose company you consistently enjoy in a variety of situations. More often than not, blasting off with someone you don’t already know well is going result in trip-curdling disharmony. That includes your drinking buddy, that smokin’ hot babe you’ve dated for two weeks, and even the achingly attractive, witty, travel writer you met in the hostel’s breakfast room.

2. Setting expectations

Discuss your general vision of the trip. Vacation? Work trip? Urban exploration? Beaches? If one person is a go-go-go, see-see-see type and the other is a chill-at-sidewalk-cafes type, friction will quickly arise. And have you ever seen control freaks travel together? Messy. Carefully consider what you’d like to accomplish on your trip and communicate this with your prospective co-pilot.

3. Budgets

The last straw for many strong relationships has occurred while standing on a busy street in pouring rain, two miles from the hostel, when one person would rather walk, saving the €1.50 bus fare, and the other just wants to be dry. Ditto for the salivating foodie whose friend can only afford self-catered bread and jam dinners. Before you start planning, establish each other’s comfort preferences and available funds for things like accommodation, food and transport.

4. Divide and conquer

It’s perfectly fine to split up when you’d each prefer to do other things. Resentment grows quickly when one person is made to feel like they are catering to the other person’s itinerary too frequently. Equally, splitting up, whether it’s for three hours or three days, will soothe mounting frustrations. It’s not a sign of trouble or failure, it’s just good policy. Additionally, you’ll have copious stories to share when you reunite.

5. Night and day

A discussion about daily routines is a good idea. An incurable night owl is going to wear down a morning person in a hurry.

6. Be considerate

After you’ve found the right companion, a little on-the-road finesse is essential. Be conscience of your companion’s mood and fatigue. Balance each other’s needs. Be neat. Don’t hog the bathroom. And for the love of Buddha, don’t bogart the wine.

Have you used any clever strategies to maintain friendship harmony while traveling?

Buenos Aires y la actual gestión del Gobierno de la Ciudad, planteando su visión de Bs As como “La capital cultural de Latinoamérica”

Entrevista a Toni Puig en Barcelona “La marca Ciudad”
Entrevistamos a Toni Puig en una mesa a la calle del mítico Café Zurich de Barcelona. Uno de los máximos exponentes mundiales del “citimarketing” y quién nos brindará una conferencia magistral el próximo 26 de Agosto en el Hotel Conrad de Punta del Este se refirió a la marca “Barcelona”y a casos de ciudades como Berlín, Shanghai o Medellín.
Toni opinó además sin tapujos sobre . Duración 18 min. 5 de Julio de 2011
ReporteInmobiliario.com ®

Naples Tango – News!!!

Naples Tango
Master the art of “Permission Seduction™”!

Tuesday, July 5, 2011

Hola, Nancy!

At last Thursday’s Practilonga I announced Jeremias and Mariela’s workshop next Thursday. Our usual Sunday Tango Brunch with them is suspended for June and July.

* * * * *

Before I tell you about the workshop, I have other great news for everyone in the SWFL tango community!:

We’re starting a Monday night Guided Practica, next Monday, July 11, from 7:30 to 10:00 PM. This will be in addition to the Thursday Practilonga.  Monday’s encounter will be a no-frills, working practica (no wine, no buffet, but spring water on the house).  I will be available to answer any questions about your tango, to help you with any issues, or to let you practice freely if you don’t want help.

Each Monday session will start with 30 minutes (7:30-8) of unstructured warm-up time, followed by 30 minutes (8-8:30) in which I’ll review a figure with you, or we’ll practice an exercise together, or learn a milonga step.  Then you’ll still have 90 minutes to practice freely, and ask for help if you like. Sound good?

- The price of the 2.5-hour Monday Guided Practica is $20*/person.
Or if you combine it with the Practilonga (normally $10), it’s $25 for both evenings (requires Monday payment).

Introductory offer (July and August 2011):
- Prepay both Practica and Practilonga for a month (July 11-August 5, August 8-Setp. 1) and pay $75 – get one week free.  Couples $130 (life partners OR practice partners).

- Prepay the Guided Practica only – $60/month.

* Note: For students enrolled in private and semi-private lessons as of July 1, the Guided Practica in addition to your program package is $15, or $45 for the month.

Contact me with questions or to enroll at 239-776-6535 or helaine@naplestango.com.

* * * * *

Jeremias and Mariela return!!

Thursday, July 7, 2011
6:00-7:30 PM
Intermediate Tango Workshop
with Jeremias Massera & Mariela Barufaldi
Register by Wed. 7/6 and save!

Followed by our regular Practilonga, 8:00-10:30 PM
News!  Jeremias will be our musicalizador (dj) this Thursday!
(While, tangueros, you can invite Mariela to dance!)

Location:
The Naples Tango Club
5650 Yahl St. (off Pine Ridge), Naples, 34109

- Practilonga – $10 (Free to my students currently enrolled in lesson programs, and to curious new observers after 8PM)
- Workshop (Intermediate/Pre-intermediate level) $30 at the door.
- Workshop with pre-registration/advance payment by Wednesday July 6: $25
Some advanced beginners may attend, with advance permission.

Please pre-register online or in-person for the workshop (you’ll pay $5 less)!   Contact me with questions at 239-776-6535 or helaine@naplestango.com.

Register directly at http://naplestango.com.
Scroll down to “Thursday Workshop and Practilonga”.

* * * * *
Looking forward to seeing you Thursday night with Jeremias and Mariela!  Remember too: Jeremias is putting on the music at the Practilonga!

Abrazos,

Helaine

P.S.  Intermediates (Advanced friends welcome too) remember to enroll early for your workshop with J&M, to save $5!  Wednesday’s the deadline for the discount.
P.P.S. Do take advantage of the new, 2.5 hour no-frills Monday practica.  You’ll get some serious practicing done, and can ask me for help!


Master the art of “Permission Seduction™”!

http://NaplesTango.com

The Naples Tango Club, 5650 Yahl St. #2, Naples, FL 34109
239-776-6535  239-236-0984 (fax)

Download Helaine’s FREE Report: “Permission Seduction™ Secret #1″ at: http://NaplesTango.com

TANGUEROS!  To watch the “Permission Seduction™” VIDEO and receive FREE 1-month e-course:  “9 Surprising Tango Tips for Men” sign up at http://permissionseduction.com.

- “Una Noche de Tango”, Practilonga every Thursday night at The Naples Tango Club
- Sunday Tango Brunch, third Sunday of every month!
Check http://NaplesTango.com for details and directions.

Schedule your lesson appointments with Helaine online at http://naplestango.genbook.com.

Watch the 6-minute video on Helaine and her tango school in Italy, UmbriaTango:

LUXURY MERCEDES BENZ, LUXURY CHOFER!, GREAT PRICES!

Our chofer Jorge Rodriguez will welcome you at the  airport.
You will be able to organize your shopping direct from leather factories  with Jorge,a Buenos Aires born that spend 30 years cooking in  NY top restaurants.
Lunch and diner at the best kept secret places for  porteños,not known by tourist,guided by New York Chef Jorge Rodiguez,actually working as a food consulting in BA.

Mercedes Benz with a bilingual  chofer,well known New York Chef and an Expert in Buenos Aires,

You can’t ask for a better welcome to  buenos aires

PRICES :
FROM AND TO AIRPORT : 70 USD
VISITS PER HOUR : 25 USD

10 ways not to be a travel writer by Lonely Planet

Straight from the keyboards of the Lonely Planet team


10 ways not to be a travel writer

Vivek WagleLonely Planet author

It’s the dream: travelling around the world and getting paid for it. Every day, thousands of aspiring travel journalists start up blogs, pitch pieces to editors and put pen to paper (at least metaphorically) in the hopes of making travel a full-time job.

Image by swimparallel, Flickr

 

The good news is that it’s achievable. While only a select few attain the high life of sipping margaritas by the pool while churning out leisurely prose on their Macbooks, travel writing for a living is a real possibility for those who have the talent and are willing to put in some really, really hard work.

However, we’ve noticed that there is a subclass of potential travel writers, photographers and video journalists who don’t really seem to have their heart in it. For some reason, they do their best to sabotage any chance of success. We believe you can learn a lot from them, so we’ve put together a list of their most common traits. Engage in these behaviours and you’re pretty much guaranteed to lock yourself out of a career in travel journalism.

10. Be sloppy

Whether you’re pitching a 500-word essay to the New Yorker or dashing off a quick blog entry, you’re presenting your professional face to the world. Is it the best face possible?

No one is perfect, and everyone except the stodgiest subeditor will forgive the occasional typo. But when you’re an aspiring content creator, any form of communication you produce becomes part of your portfolio. If your work is amateurish in quality, don’t expect to be paid for it.

9. Treat your pieces as personal journals

If you’ve started up a blog to keep your friends and family informed about your travels, go crazy! But all too often, we see works that are all about the creator and not at all about providing real value to the audience. They have the stink of those WhatWeDidOnOurFamilyVacation slideshows that everyone used to dread.

Use Facebook or personal blogs to reassure your mother and make your friends jealous. Use the avenue from which you hope to derive income to inform, educate, entertain or otherwise improve the lives of your audience.

8. Be flaky

Have you promised an editor that you’ll have that sample in for next week? Have you told your blogging audience, ‘Stay tuned for a big post tomorrow?’ Then please deliver. Nothing alienates people more than broken promises. Editors have tight, busy schedules and they are primarily concerned with getting great content out on time. Your audience has a ton of options vying for their attention, and if you fail to earn their trust they will go elsewhere.

7. Act like a jerk

You’d think this one would be obvious. But we’re constantly surprised by content creators who appear to lack any respect for those who are there to help them.

Here are a few simple tips:

  • Don’t call your editors names or make bombastic demands from them. (Any reasonable editor will listen to calm, professionally delivered opinion, but no one wants to be yelled at.)
  • Don’t belittle the people who comment on your website.
  • Don’t be rude in any form of communication with anyone who might have anything to do with your getting your work published. These people are here to help you live your dream. Don’t ruin it for yourself.

6. Stay shallow and general rather than building expertise

Bill Bryson may be able to say anything he likes about whatever he likes (no matter how general), but you can’t just go out and make observations about ‘stuff’. Build your niche and establish your credibility in it – this is crucial to earning trust. Are you THE authority on hiking in northern Spain? Are you an incredible wildlife photographer? Are your videos mordantly funny? Figure out what it is you’re amazing at, and go after that. Once you’ve established your area of expertise, you can begin branching out. But start focused.

5. Demand respect without earning it

Not too long ago, having your words on a printed page provided an instant credibility boost. But nowadays, anyone can self-publish – to the web, to ebook readers and even to print-on-demand machines. What this means is that you need to provide better evidence for your claims to expertise than being a published writer. Have you won any credible awards? Can you demonstrate having a large following? Have you produced something truly meaningful? If you can answer ‘yes’ to these questions, then let people know! And if you can’t, get to work on it. We’d all love to be paid $5 per word, but before you get there you need to demonstrate your value for more realistic returns.

4. Lack voice and personality

Most travel writing is insanely boring. If you can make someone smile, cry or act, you’re well ahead of the game. Gimmicks and tricks can help, but it will come down to how authentic you are. If you don’t put enough of yourself in your work, your travel content will be as woeful as the rest of the dross that pollutes the travel-blogging universe, and even the Travel Literature section of your local bookstore. Please be interesting.

3. Act without integrity

Trading unverified links with others to bolster your search-engine juice? Made deals with the devil (eg sketchy ‘advertisers’ who put malware on people’s machines)? Lied about your accomplishments – such as where you’ve been? Making promises you can’t keep to your editors and audience?

Sorry – there’s just no room in the travel-content community for you. Get out.

2. Ignore or disrespect your audience

Your audience is by far the most important factor in your success as a travel journalist. And yet we so often come across people who have no idea whom they’re writing, photographing or making videos for. If you don’t know who is going to consume your content, you haven’t targeted it appropriately. And you’ve demonstrated that your priorities are all wrong.

If you’re pitching or creating a piece, make sure you know exactly whom it’s intended for. (Case in point: if you’ve read this far down this list, then this list is DEFINITELY intended for you.)

1. Never try

Of all the mistakes aspiring travel writers make, none is more catastrophic than failing to enter the game.

It’s not an easy life. It requires a lot of talent, determination, perseverance and resilience. But the world is full of people who turn their travels into a living – through blogging, professional writing, video journalism and beyond. There are more resources than ever available to those who wish to travel for a living. If it’s what you want to do, then go for it.

What do you think?

Top 10 Shopping Cities on the Rise : PALERMO HOLLYWOOD – Buenos Aires

Top 10 Shopping Cities on the Rise

Since shopping districts the world over are becoming increasingly interchangeable with big-box stores, we sought out urban neighborhoods, some emerging and others longer established, where you can still find homegrown items that impart a true sense of place.

Central District, Hong Kong
Colonia Roma, Mexico City
HaTachana, Tel Aviv
La Candelaria, Bogota
Palermo Hollywood, Buenos Aires
Monti, Rome
Nakameguro, Tokyo
Northern Liberties, Philadelphia
Rue Tiquetonne, Paris
Shoreditch, London

Top 10 Shopping Cities on the Rise

Palermo Hollywood, Buenos Aires

With neighboring Palermo Soho reaching a stylish crescendo in the last five years, art galleries, design hotels, and quaint boutiques have spilled over into Palermo Hollywood, so named for its many movie and TV studios.

Shop: Housed inside an old livestock market, the Mercado de las Pulgas is a critical shopping point for antiques gurus. Dozens of vendors display rare items (along with a fair share of bric-a-brac), from Venetian glass chandeliers to vintage Argentine furnishings. At Braga Menéndez Arte Contemporáneo (www.galeriabm.com), a collective of 39 Latin American artists produces wildly original furnishings, sculptures, paintings, photography, and installations. The members’ work – on view and for sale – has made this gallery the neighborhood’s hub for contemporary art and creative types.

Eat: Locals will direct a steak-weary visitor to Jangada (www.restaurantejangada.com), a seafood spot dishing up platters of local grilled fish like dorado and white croaker. Or a shopper can recharge with a quick bite – say, café con leche and perfectly flaky pastries – at the boho-chic Oui Oui (www.ouioui.com.ar).

Skip: Puerto Madera, an ultra mod new business district created from a stretch of abandoned warehouses along the Río de la Plata, has plenty of flash (pricey boutiques and hotels) but none of this shopping city’s old-world charm.

Robot Zonda MAÑANA! – Mayo 21 / 21.00 hs- Av. Scalabrini Ortiz 1685

Robot Zonda

Robot Zonda

MAÑANA! – 21.00 hs
Tocan: Robot Zonda

Cátulo Castillo

av. Scalabrini Ortiz 1685
Palermo, Ciudad de Buenos Aires
Buenos Aires
Argentina
Tel: 54 (011) 4831-9717
 

+ Info

Robot Zonda presenta su disco debut.

Está permitida la entrada a menores.

www.robotzonda.com.ar

Precio:  $ 15 en Locuras (Flores y Once) y Anthology Discos (gal. Bond Street) – el disco se podrá conseguir el día del show a $ 20.

ArteBA . La nación

ArteBA

Publicado: 19.05.2011 | 11:10

¡Buenas Buenas!

Ayer estuve en la inauguración de ArteBA. Una excelente oportunidad para proponerles un look de noche más serio, leí que muchas querían.

En primer lugar les cuento que la exposición está a partir de hoy hasta el 23 de mayo. Vale la pena visitarla, miles de stands, lleno de obras que son realmente inspiradoras.

¡Yo, como siempre, cámara en mano! Les tengo varias fotos. Un poco de todo, cuadros que me gustaron, gente linda, un anillo especial que me prestó Oleana cuando visité el stand de la galería Dabbah Torrejón, Marta Minujín con unas botas que se salen de su obra y Milo Lockett junto a sus cuadros que me transmiten mucha alegría y cada día me gustan más.

Por otro lado, en cuanto a mi look, les cuento que como todavía no había oscurecido cuando salí de casa, me saqué las fotos de detalle con luz natural para que lo puedan apreciar mejor.

¡Vamos a describirlo! Tengo un saco rojo cruzado, con solapas grandes y botones dorados de María Cher, un vestido negro de hilo con buche bien abrigado de Zara, unas medias en red con motivos de flores de Estancias Chiripá, una cartera negra con cadena dorada de Bendito Glam y unos zapatos cerrados con una trenza en el costado que me encanta y poco taco (para caminar más cómoda), de C´est Fini.

No se si habrán notado, el make up tan bien logrado que tengo. Me maquillo Caro Fernández… ¡y no les cuento más por que es una sorpresa que les estoy preparando para mañana viernes!!!!!

¡Espero que disfruten de las fotos de la exposición y que se copen para ir! (Beneficios con Club La Nación)

Saludos

Lulu

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