that’s what it was called an informative program about home economics. At El canto de un duro they taught us the value of combs and yogurt. Or to distinguish the qualities of bottled mineral water from that coming out of the tap. Mª Carmen García Vela used to present it to the tables with sincerity and naturalness on Saturdays in the seventies. He’s a great communicator, spending the longest time in charge of the perennial Weekly Report.
Only the song of a didactic and talkative tough guy like himself, it was a direct heir to 35 million Spaniards, subtitled Looking at the Peseta that Alfredo Amestoy and José Antonio Plaza helped us save. Some of us were gifted students. Coming from very humble classesWe’ve managed to flex our Lilliputian economies by stretching them with austerity and imagination.
until the euro arrives. A journalist named Letizia Ortiz Rocasolano wakes up.was responsible for running the corporate campaign for the promotion of the new currency. At the time of the airing of El canto de un duro, the program of State Headquarters, Open Spectator, is now on the air, carrying out the weekly agenda of her and her husband, Our Kings.
While those of us trying to stretch their savings with the euro have already had a hard time, war has come in Ukraine and food prices have skyrocketed. Although the news is good news about the macro economy, inflation and annual growth, the micro economy looks frightening. I didn’t get the celebrity preference. However I see that my savings today are almost half of their 2020 value.: Not everything that gets more expensive will go down.