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Snakes! Why did it have to be snakes? Because St. Patrick's Day was earlier this week, and to celebrate the man who drove all the snakes out of Ireland ("you alright in the back there, lads?") this week's Empire Podcast sees Chris Hewitt, Helen O'Hara, James Dyer, and Beth Webb discuss some of their favourite snake moments in films. Or fillums. Then, our intrepid quartet get their parseltongues into the week's deluge of movie news, including the Spider-Man: Brand New Day and Dune Part 3 trailers, and they look back at the Oscars as well. Reviews-wise, Phil Lord & Chris Miller's Project Hail Mary, Radio Silence's Ready Or Not: Here I Come, Ugo Bienvenu's Arco, and Gus Van Sant's Dead Man's Wire are given the once-over, while the wonderful Lord and Miller are this week's guests, sitting down for a lovely natter about puppets, space, and much more with Chris. [55:48 - 1:10:19 approx] Oh, and James edges closer to a new nickname. Enjoy!
Bryan and Anderson review Hamnet, Arco, The Voice of Hind Rajab, and Ghost Elephants. Then the boys close the door on awards season with The Vaulties 2026! Loaded for Bear New Promo Video! The Film Vault on Youtube TFV Patreon is Here for Even More Film Vault Anderson's new doc: Loaded for Bear Atty's Antiques Baldywood Newsletter COMEDY CONFESSIONAL Listener Art: Fallon Parker Featured Artist: Natalie Wells The Film Vault on Twitch Buy Bryan's Book Shrinkage Here The Film Vaulters “Kubrick is Everywhere” Shirt CONNECT WITH US: Instagram: @AndersonAndBryan Facebook.com/TheFilmVault Twitter: @TheFilmVault HAVE A CHAT WITH ANDY HERE ATTY & ANDY: DIRECTED BY A FOUR-YEAR-OLD Subscribe Atty and Andy's Youtube Channel Here THE COLD COCKLE SHORTS RULES OF REDUCTION MORMOAN THE CULT OF CARANO Please Give Groupers a Rotten Tomatoes Audience Score Here Please Rate It on IMDB Here The Blu-ray, US The Blu-ray, International Groupers is now available on these platforms. On Amazon On Google Play On iTunes On Youtube On Tubi On Vudu Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
This week we bounce from the eternal debate over pie superiority (and some truly questionable anti-pie opinions) into sci-fi revivals, strange travel stories, and the art of a good ending—before closing things out with a genuinely unsettling short story that may or may not leave you side-eyeing your bathroom forever. Real Life We kick things off with the most important topic we've ever covered: pie. Favorites, non-favorites, and a few takes that might genuinely damage friendships. No spoilers—but some of us have very strong opinions. Ben brings a little sci-fi hope (and caution) with talk of a possible return to the world of Firefly. Between comics and expanded universe material—like the recent developments covered over at SYFY Wire (https://www.syfy.com/syfy-wire/firefly-brand-new-verse-comic-boom-studios) there's clearly still life in the 'verse. But as always, the question is: should it come back, or is it better left alone? Meanwhile, the planned Buffy reboot/sequel has officially stalled out at Hulu, which… honestly might be for the best. [bad opinion AI] Devon takes us on a trip to Eureka Springs, a town built on the idea that its waters had healing properties. It's got that old-world charm mixed with just enough weird to make it interesting—complete with a glass-and-wood beam church, ziplining adventures, and a full-on St. Patrick's Day parade. A little history, a little adrenaline, a little chaos. Steven celebrates Pie Day the right way, follows it up with an all-day beach trip, and then pivots straight into Pirate Borg prep. There's a game on the horizon, and the hype is real. Future or Now Ben takes the wheel with a surprisingly thoughtful discussion about endings—what makes them work, why they matter, and how often they completely fall apart. This leads into Babylon 5 (with a shoutout to Josh), and if you want a refresher or a reason to revisit it, check this out: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z54XNJivHOs From there, it's all about what's next in Star Trek. Starfleet Academy Season 1 has people talking, and the future lineup is stacked: Strange New Worlds Season 4 is on the way this summer, with Season 5 already lining up some heavy hitters—including Thomas Jane stepping in as Dr. McCoy and Kai Murakami as Sulu. And then there's the truly baffling situation: Star Trek: Prodigy just won an Emmy… and is basically impossible to watch. If you want to feel equal parts excited and frustrated, here's the breakdown: https://trekmovie.com/2026/03/04/star-trek-prodigy-wins-emmy-for-animation/ Steven dives into some fun (and slightly chaotic) tech territory with green screen experimentation. Corridor Crew breaks it down here: https://youtu.be/3Ploi723hg4?si=Mu_9whhpY_gvJldY and if you want to mess with it yourself, the open-source tool Corridor Key is here: https://github.com/nikopueringer/CorridorKey Book Club Next week, we're checking out Arco!—you can find it on Apple TV right here: https://tv.apple.com/us/movie/arco/umc.cmc.16jgcgmdg48xptfayroel0yvy We'll report back on whether it's worth your time (and money). This week, we read What We Mean When We Talk About the Hole in the Bathroom by Angela Liu: https://www.uncannymagazine.com/article/what-we-mean-when-we-talk-about-the-hole-in-the-bathroom/ And look—this one sparked some debate. Ben tries to walk Steven through it… because it didn't quite click at first. But Devon cuts straight through the noise and nails it: this is a horror story. Not loud, not obvious—but deeply, quietly unsettling in a way that sticks with you longer than you'd like. One More Thing Ben's got boots on the ground this weekend at the Beacon Art Show Ekphrastic Poetry Reading, happening Saturday (3/21) at 2pm at the SLO United Methodist Church. If you're local, go check it out—support some art, hear some poetry, and maybe report back. If you've got strong pie opinions, thoughts on whether Firefly should come back, or theories about that bathroom story, we want to hear them. And if you haven't yet—subscribe, follow, and share the show with someone who enjoys a good mix of chaos, sci-fi, and questionable food takes.
David discusses the movies he's been watching, including The Carpenter's Son, Rebuilding, Arco, Heaven, Trap House, Hedda, Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere, The Way of the Dragon, The Long Walk and A House of Dynamite.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Dave and Alonso bounce back from having colds and do some massive pre-Oscar catching up with docs and animated features. Leave us a five-star review on Apple Podcasts, follow @linoleumcast on Bluesky, Instagram, and Facebook, this is what it sounds like. Get this show ad-free by joining our Patreon: https://patreon.com/LinoleumKnife Read Dave's online magazine: https://sluggish.ghost.io
Real Life This week's episode begins the way many of our weeks began: confused, slightly annoyed, and one hour short on sleep thanks to the time change. Ben kicks things off by voicing what everyone is feeling — daylight saving time is rough. Losing an hour never gets easier, and the collective fog hangs over the whole episode like a mild but persistent headache. Devon isn't exactly escaping the chaos either. Between a hockey game down in Louisiana and spring break activities with the kids, his schedule is all over the place. Add the time shift on top of that and it's a miracle anyone is awake enough to record. Ben quickly pivots into defending Starfleet Academy, which he insists is a "tremendously good show." According to him, the loudest critics clearly aren't watching it. During the conversation Steven realizes he somehow made it this far in life without fully understanding what the Omega Particle is, which becomes a small but hilarious rabbit hole. Meanwhile the group grumbles about the Voyager game releasing day-one DLC — a move that feels more than a little gross. Steven brings a literary palate cleanser to the table. After wrestling with the famously labyrinthine House of Leaves, he recommends another unsettling architectural mystery: Strange Houses by Uketsu. If eerie homes and unsettling mysteries are your thing, it might be worth checking out here: https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/strange-houses-uketsu/1146276773 Ben contributes a strange internet gem called Pricemaster, a bizarre and hypnotic video that quickly becomes one of those "you just have to see it" moments during the episode. If you want to experience the same confusion we did, you can watch it here: https://youtu.be/CUmmxW7Ksc8?si=6s1IRr2FuGy72Zo8 Devon then unveils the real headline of the Real Life segment: a brand-new guitar amp. He picked up a Fender Mustang GTX 100, and the excitement level is off the charts. The amp includes digital modeling, built-in Wi-Fi, Bluetooth connectivity, and an accompanying app that lets him endlessly tweak tones. Devon is talking about it so much that it raises a bigger question — he actually sold a guitar to buy the amp. If you know Devon, that's a shocking development. Future or Now Ben kicks off this segment with a fascinating animated project called Arco, produced by Natalie Portman. The story follows a ten-year-old boy from the year 2932 who isn't supposed to time travel yet. Naturally, he steals a time-travel cape and gemstone, aiming for the age of dinosaurs… and instead crash-lands in the year 2075. There he meets a girl named Iris and her robot nanny, and the unlikely trio may be the only ones who can prevent a global catastrophe. You can read more about the project here: https://collider.com/arco-streaming-online-natalie-portman/ Devon brings a science question that sounds simple but gets weird fast: why aren't mammals as colorful as reptiles, birds, or fish? If you look around the animal kingdom, mammals mostly stick to browns, blacks, and muted tones. The explanation has a lot to do with fur structure and evolutionary pressures — bright pigments are much easier to display in feathers, scales, and bare skin than in thick mammalian fur. The article that sparked the discussion is here: https://www.livescience.com/animals/why-arent-mammals-as-colorful-as-reptiles-birds-or-fish Steven rounds out the segment with something even stranger — humans secretly have stripes. Not visible stripes, unfortunately, but real biological patterns called Blaschko's lines. These lines emerge from the way skin cells divide and migrate during development. Under certain lighting conditions or medical circumstances, these patterns can actually appear, meaning everyone is walking around with hidden tiger stripes or cow-like patterns built into their skin. You can read more about that discovery here: https://www.sciencealert.com/humans-actually-have-secret-stripes-and-other-strange-markings Book Club Next week's reading is "What We Mean When We Talk About the Hole in the Bathroom" by Angela Liu, a title that raises several questions before you even start the story. If you want to read ahead with us, you can find it here: https://www.uncannymagazine.com/article/what-we-mean-when-we-talk-about-the-hole-in-the-bathroom/ This week the group dives into "Presence" by Ken Liu, which you can read here: https://www.uncannymagazine.com/article/presence/ The story centers on an elderly parent living abroad and the adult children trying to care for them remotely through telepresence technology. The discussion quickly expands beyond the story itself. The hosts talk about the stark contrast between elder care in America and in other countries where multi-generational households are more common. That leads into a broader conversation about American individualism — the cultural idea that success means leaving home, chasing opportunity, and building an independent life. While that independence can open doors, it also creates distance and sometimes loneliness. The technology in the story doesn't feel like science fiction for long. Telepresence robots and remote caregiving systems are already approaching the level shown in the story. The real question isn't whether the technology works — it's whether it can truly replace the sense of community and presence that people lose when families scatter across the world. It's a thoughtful and surprisingly emotional conversation that leaves everyone wondering what responsibility looks like in a world where being physically present isn't always possible.
Entre la animación y el documental histórico, este especial nos sumerge en la historia medieval europea para analizar la vida y la muerte de una mujer que cambió el curso de la Historia.
"Sinners" set the record for most Oscar nominations with 16. "One Battle After Another" isn't far behind with 13. "One Battle" was considered the early favorite for many awards, but "Sinners" has been coming on strong during awards season. Which film will win the night? Will Paul Thomas Anderson finally win an Oscar? Can Timothée Chalamet top Leonardo DiCaprio and Michael B. Jordan? We'll know soon enough with the 98th Academy Awards airing Sunday night (ABC and Hulu, 7 p.m. EDT). On this week's episode of Streamed & Screened, co-hosts Bruce Miller and Terry Lipshetz discuss the two films and the favorites to win the major categories. Complete list of 2026 Oscar nominees Best picture: "Bugonia," "F1," "Frankenstein," "Hamnet," "Marty Supreme," "One Battle After Another," "The Secret Agent," "Sentimental Value," "Sinners," "Train Dreams." Lead actress: Jessie Buckley, "Hamnet;" Rose Byrne, "If I Had Legs I'd Kick You;" Renate Reinsve, "Sentimental Value;" Emma Stone, "Bugonia;" Kate Hudson, "Song Sung Blue." Lead actor: Timothée Chalamet, "Marty Supreme;" Leonardo DiCaprio, "One Battle After Another;" Ethan Hawke, "Blue Moon;" Michael B. Jordan, "Sinners;" Wagner Moura, "The Secret Agent." Supporting actress: Elle Fanning, "Sentimental Value;" Inga Ibsdotter LilIeaas, "Sentimental Value;" Amy Madigan, "Weapons;" Wunmi Mosaku, "Sinners;" Teyana Taylor, "One Battle After Another." Supporting actor: Jacob Elordi, "Frankenstein;" Sean Penn, "One Battle After Another;" Stellan Skarsgård, "Sentimental Value;" Benicio del Toro, "One Battle After Another;" Delroy Lindo, "Sinners." Director: Paul Thomas Anderson, "One Battle After Another;" Ryan Coogler, "Sinners;" Chloé Zhao, "Hamnet;" Josh Safdie, "Marty Supreme;" Joachim Trier, "Sentimental Value." Original song: "Golden" from "KPop Demon Hunters," "Train Dreams" from "Train Dreams," "Dear Me" from "Diane Warren: Relentless," "I Lied To You" from "Sinners," "Sweet Dreams Of Joy" from "Viva Verdi!" Original score: "Bugonia," Jerskin Fendrix; "Frankenstein," Alexandre Desplat; "Hamnet," Max Richter; "One Battle After Another," Jonny Greenwood; "Sinners," Ludwig Göransson. Animated film: "Arco," "Elio," "KPop Demon Hunters," "Little Amélie or the Character of Rain," "Zootopia 2." International film: "The Secret Agent," Brazil; "It Was Just an Accident," France; "Sentimental Value," Norway; "Sirât," Spain; "The Voice of Hind Rajab," Tunisia. Documentary feature: "The Perfect Neighbor," "The Alabama Solution," "Come See Me in the Good Light," "Cutting Through Rocks," "Mr. Nobody Against Putin." Casting: "Hamnet," "Marty Supreme," "One Battle After Another," "The Secret Agent," "Sinners." Best sound: "F1," "Frankenstein," "One Battle after Another," "Sinners," "Sirāt." Cinematography: "Frankenstein," "Marty Supreme," "One Battle After Another," "Sinners," "Train Dreams." Original screenplay: "Blue Moon," Robert Kaplow; "It Was Just an Accident," Jafar Panahi, with script collaborators Nader Saïvar, Shadmehr Rastin, Mehdi Mahmoudian; "Marty Supreme," Ronald Bronstein and Josh Safdie; "Sentimental Value," Eskil Vogt and Joachim Trier; "Sinners," Ryan Coogler. Adapted screenplay: "Bugonia," Will Tracy; "Frankenstein," Guillermo del Toro; "Hamnet," Chloé Zhao and Maggie O'Farrell; "One Battle After Another," Paul Thomas Anderson; "Train Dreams," Clint Bailey and Greg Kwedar. Live action short film: "Butcher's Stain," "A Friend of Dorothy," "Jane Austen's Period Drama," "The Singers," "Two People Exchanging Saliva." Animated short film: "Butterfly," "Forevergreen," "The Girl Who Cried Pearls," "Retirement Plan," "The Three Sisters." Documentary short film: "All the Empty Rooms," "Armed Only with a Camera: The Life and Death of Brent Renaud," "Children No More: Were and Are Gone," "The Devil Is Busy," "Perfectly a Strangeness." Visual effects: "Avatar: Fire and Ash," "F1," "Jurassic World Rebirth," "The Lost Bus," "Sinners." Production design: "Frankenstein," "Hamnet," "Marty Supreme," "One Battle After Another," "Sinners." Film editing: "F1," "Marty Supreme," "One Battle After Another," "Sentimental Value," "Sinners." Makeup and hairstyling: "Frankenstein," "Kokuho," "Sinners," "The Smashing Machine," "The Ugly Stepsister." Costume design: "Avatar: Fire and Ash," "Frankenstein," "Hamnet," "Marty Supreme," "Sinners." About the show Streamed & Screened is a podcast about movies and TV hosted by Bruce Miller, a longtime entertainment reporter who is the retired editor of the Sioux City Journal in Iowa and Terry Lipshetz, a senior producer for Lee Enterprises based in Madison, Wisconsin. The show was named Best Podcast in the 2025 Iowa Better Newspaper Contest. Theme music Thunder City by Lunareh, used under license from Soundstripe. YouTube clearance: FV694ULMCJQDG0IY
A lo largo de la historia, figuras como profetas bíblicos, el Oráculo de Delfos, Juana de Arco, Washington, Einstein o Tesla han atribuido su sabiduría a fuentes sobrenaturales.
Este lunes hemos empezado la semana alucinando con la intervención que tuvo que hacer la Policía Local de Tudela tras haber sido alertada por una vecina: salvó la vida de una oveja que había quedado tumbada sobre su espalda tras haberse pegado un festín en un campo de brócoli. Además, estamos desolados porque Esperanza Gracia cuelga sus "cartas". Así lo ha anunciado ella misma tras constatar que ya no tiene audiencia en televisión. Y tras el fin de semana, nos hemos puesto al día de la (otra) actualidad con nuestros Matías y Piqueras que nos han contado, entre otras cosas que "un fontanero gana el premio revelación de ARCO tras olvidarse la caja de herramientas en medio del pasillo".See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Este lunes hemos empezado la semana alucinando con la intervención que tuvo que hacer la Policía Local de Tudela tras haber sido alertada por una vecina: salvó la vida de una oveja que había quedado tumbada sobre su espalda tras haberse pegado un festín en un campo de brócoli. Además, estamos desolados porque Esperanza Gracia cuelga sus "cartas". Así lo ha anunciado ella misma tras constatar que ya no tiene audiencia en televisión. Y tras el fin de semana, nos hemos puesto al día de la (otra) actualidad con nuestros Matías y Piqueras que nos han contado, entre otras cosas que "un fontanero gana el premio revelación de ARCO tras olvidarse la caja de herramientas en medio del pasillo".See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Hosted by Picturehouse's very own Lara Peters, The Love Of Cinema podcast discusses the best new releases, with a little help from some of our favourite film critics and the occasional special guest from the world of cinema. This month we're joined by guest film critics Leila Latif and Ada Enechi to discuss discuss some of the best new films coming to Picturehosue Cinemas, including: The Bride!, Arco, Project Hail Mary and How To Make A Killing. Lara is also joined by writer-director Maggie Maggie Gyllenhaal, and talk about making The Bride! for the big screen. Rate and subscribe on Apple Podcasts. Rate and follow us on Spotify. Find us on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram with @picturehouses. Find our latest cinema listings at picturehouses.com. Produced by Stripped Media. Thank you for listening. If you enjoy the show, please subscribe, rate, review and share with your friends. Vive le Cinema.
"Sexta é Saldanha", já apanharam esta? Neste episódio, o Henrique vem relembrar um período da sua vida estudantil, quando, sextas-feiras à tarde, virar jola no Arco do Cego era modalidade nacional.Logo: Carolina LinoGenérico: Catarina Torres (Mentoria: Marta Tenreiro)Trilha - Luís Batista
En el marco del Mes de la Mujer, llega a Montevideo “Juicio a una zorra”, el intenso monólogo escrito por el dramaturgo español Miguel del Arco que revisita el mito de Helena de Troya desde una mirada contemporánea.La puesta, dirigida por la directora uruguaya María Dodera y protagonizada por la actriz peruana Cécica Bernasconi, tendrá una única función el viernes 21 de marzo a las 21:00 horas en el Auditorio Vaz Ferreira.En escena, Helena toma la palabra para cuestionar la historia que la condenó durante siglos y contar su propia versión de los hechos. A través de un monólogo potente y desafiante, la obra dialoga con los prejuicios y estigmas que han marcado la mirada sobre las mujeres a lo largo del tiempo, invitando al público a repensar un mito clásico desde el presente.La puesta ha tenido un destacado recorrido internacional. En Uruguay fue nominada a los Premios Florencio como Mejor espectáculo extranjero, mientras que en Perú recibió los Premios Oficio Crítico en categorías como mejor interpretación, mejor obra y mejor dirección.La función también marca el inicio de la celebración de los 35 años de labor de la productora teatral independiente de Dodera, MADO.María nos habló sobre la potencia del texto de Del Arco, el proceso de trabajo con Bernasconi, a quien considera una de las mejores actrices peruanas, y el diálogo cultural que atraviesa esta puesta, donde el mito clásico se convierte en una voz contemporánea que interpela al presente.
Comenzamos el repaso de las novedades culturales analizando con Crisitina los datos más destacados de la feria de ARCO que finalizó ayer domingo. Continuamos entrevistando a Pablo Morello, responsable del banco de germoplasma de la Universidad de Córdoba. Se han enviado 10 semillas de olivo al llamado "banco del fin del mundo", en Noruega, donde se conservan muestras de todo tipo. Seguimos con una entrevista a la escritora madrileña Carmen Torreblanca, quien nos hablará de su nuevo libro 'Cosas bellas por las que matar. Grupis, fans y musas'. Un proyecto que reúne 18 textos que revisan tres figuras incómodas y persistentes de la cultura popular: la fan, la grupi y la musa. Acabamos con Barra Libre, la sección de Aloma, donde esta vez nos trae el libro 'Helena de nada', de Makenna Goodman. Una obra donde la figura de su protagonista, Helena, emerge con su enigmática personalidad.Escuchar audio
Siempre se ha dicho que ARCO se diferencia de otras ferias de arte contemporáneo por su atención a América Latina. La cita más importante de la creación artística en Madrid se convierte, esta semana, una vez más, en puente entre Europa y América. El listado de nombres propios y galerías es enorme pero no renunciamos a ofrecerles una pequeña pincelada de lo que podemos encontrar en esta 45 edición de la Semana del Arte.Escuchar audio
El domingo es 8 marzo, el Día Internacional de la Mujer, por lo que nos fijamos en los millones de mujeres que, en América Latina, sostienen gran parte de la economía con su trabajo: el formal y el informal. Para ello, conectamos con nuestra colaboradora externa mexicana, la periodista Kirely Macedo. También hablamos del restablecimiento de las relaciones diplomáticas entre Estados Unidos y Venezuela, de la nueva amenaza de Donald Trump a Cuba y del pacto contra el narcotráfico en América Latina. Descubrimos cómo se introdujo en cacao en Europa y repasamos las galerías de arte latinas de ARCO.Escuchar audio
Georgia Sarquella-Brugada, Jefa del Servicio de Cardiología Pediátrica del Hospital Sant Joan de Deu de Barcelona, cuenta cómo ha sido la implantación del marcapasos más pequeño del mundo. Manuel Bouzas, arquitecto y profesor en la Universidad de Cornell nos habla sobre su proyecto para ARCO madrid 2026. Escuchamos las audiobiografías de los finalistas de febrero y la Palabra del día escogida por Isaías Lafuente es "Irán".
Miguel Ponce @IngMiguelPonce (Analista en Comercio Exterior) Del Arco Político @delacropolitico @DarioDelArco
DEL ARCO POLÍTICO con Darío Del Arco 05-03-2026 Entrevistas a: Miguel Ponce @IngMiguelPonce (Analista en Comercio Exterior) Juan Negri @jjnegri4 (Politólogo, Director carreras de ciencia política y estudios internacionales @utditella )
Comenzamos desde el IFEMA, donde comienza hoy, 4 de marzo, la feria de arte contemporáneo ARCO. Cristina Moreno se encuentra por allí para contarnos cómo está el ambiente, y qué se va a poder visitar en los próximos días. Después, filosofía y naturaleza se funden en una. El escritor Fernando Beruete nos invita a entender la contemplación como forma de conocimiento en su nuevo libro 'Filosíntesis: espiritualidad y filosofía desde el jardín'. Acabamos con la Barra Libre de Aloma, quien nos habla sobre el libro de Lili Anoik, 'Didion y Babitz': una puesta en paralelo de dos escritoras opuestas en muchos sentidos.Escuchar audio
Send a textAwards season has entered the treehouse. This week, Andrea and Ryan break down the 2026 Best Animated Film nominees — first impressions, emotional reactions, and the only metric that truly matters: which character would make the best plush.We briefly visit each film, discuss what makes them awards-worthy (or chaotic), and make our official Grown-Ass Kids Club pick for who should take home the statue. Is it prestige? Is it vibes? Is it marketable stuffed animal potential? Yes.Follow us @grownasskidsclub
Arrancamos con las noticias culturales más destacadas. El Rijksmuseum de Amsterdam atribuye a Rembrandt el cuadro 'La visión de Zacarías en el templo', Michel Houellebecq regresa a la música y Europa concede un millón de euros al Círculo de Bellas Artes y otras entidades europeas. Cristina Moreno nos recibe desde El Círculo de Bellas Artes, donde nos habla de la exposición 'Fernando Botero: rotundo e íntimo, 1973-2023', que nos invita a entrar en los espacios donde nace la obra del artista colombiano. Continuamos con arte en las habitaciones de un hotel. Es lo que se podrá visitar en el 'Hybrid Art Fair', un evento en Madrid que reúne 16 experiencias de arte efímero en torno a Arco. Charlamos con sus directoras, Aída F. Chaves y Ana Sanfrutos, y con Sasha Falcke, que presenta una performance. Y acabamos con la Barra Libre de Aloma, que nos trae un libro de la escritora Fernanda Trías. Se llama 'Miembro Ventral', y contiene diez piezas sobre la dictadura y la venganza.Escuchar audio
Fernando Savore @fernandosavore (Vicepresidente de la Federación de Almaceneros Pcia. de Buenos Aires) Del Arco Político @delarcopolitico @DarioDelArco
DEL ARCO POLÍTICO con Darío Del Arco 26-02-2026 Entrevistas a: Eduardo Falcone @dipfalcone (Diputado Nacional por PBA. Integrante del Bloque MID) Sara García (Secretaria General de AMET) Fernando Savore @fernandosavore (Vicepresidente de la Federación de Almaceneros Pcia. de Buenos Aires)
Sara García (Secretaria General de AMET) Del Arco Político @delarcopolitico @DarioDelArco
Eduardo Falcone @dipfalcone (Diputado Nacional por PBA. Integrante del Bloque MID) Del Arco Político @delarcopolitico @DarioDelArco
DEL ARCO POLÍTICO con Darío Del Arco 09-10-2025
DEL ARCO POLÍTICO con Darío Del Arco 02-10-2025 Entrevistas a: Daniel Artana @ArtanaDaniel (Economista Jefe de FIEL) Fernando Gray @fernandogray (Intendente de Esteban Echeverría @MunicipioEE Candidato a diputado nacional por @UnionFederal_Ok ) Dr. Ramiro Larrea (Médico, Jefe del Servicio de Clínica Médica del Hospital Central de San Isidro)
Dr. Ramiro Larrea (Médico, Jefe del Servicio de Clínica Médica del Hospital Central de San Isidro) Del Arco Político @delarcopolitico @DarioDelArco
Daniel Artana @ArtanaDaniel (Economista Jefe de FIEL) Del Arco Político @DarioDelArco @delarcopolitico
DEL ARCO POLÍTICO con Darío Del Arco 21-08-2025 Entrevistas a: Gabriel Puricelli @SoyPuri (Analista Internacional, Coordinador del Programa de Política Internacional del Laboratorio de Políticas Públicas) Pablo Hassan @PabloHassan9 (Intendente de la Ciudad de Oberá, Misiones)
DEL ARCO POLÍTICO con Darío Del Arco 14-08-2025 Entrevistas a: Fernando R. Marengo @fmarengo (Economista Jefe de Black Toro @BlackTORO_us ) Graciela Ocaña @gracielaocana (Legisladora de la Ciudad de Buenos Aires, Presidenta de @confianzapubli ) Maximiliano Ferraro @maxiferraro (Presidente Coalición Cívica ARI. Diputado Nacional por la Ciudad de Buenos Aires)
Graciela Ocaña @gracielaocana (Legisladora de la Ciudad de Buenos Aires, Presidenta de @confianzapubli ) Del Arco Político @DarioDelArco
Fernando R. Marengo @fmarengo (Economista Jefe de Black Toro @BlackTORO_us ) Del Arco Político @DarioDelArco
Julio Cobos @juliocobos (Diputado Nacional UCR) Del Arco Político @delarcopolitico @DarioDelArco
Alejandro Giacoia @alegiacoia (Economista de Econviews @econviews ) Del Arco Político @delarcopolitico @DarioDelArco
DEL ARCO POLÍTICO con Darío Del Arco 10-04-2025 Entrevista a: Viviana Isasi @VivianaIsasi (Co Directora de Isasi / Burdman Consultores @isasiburdman ) Sebastián Menescaldi @smenescaldi (Economista, Director Asociado de Eco Go @EcoGoConsultor1 )
Sebastián Menescaldi @smenescaldi (Economista, Director Asociado de Eco Go @EcoGoConsultor1 ) Del Arco Político @delarcopolitico @DarioDelArco
Viviana Isasi @VivianaIsasi (Co Directora de Isasi / Burdman Consultores @isasiburdman )Del Arco Político @delarcopolitico @DarioDelArco
Emilio Apud @emapu (Ex Secretario de Energía y Minería de la Nación) Del Arco Político @DarioDelArco @delarcopolitico
Daniel Artana @ArtanaDaniel (Economista Jefe de FIEL) Del Arco Político @DarioDelArco @delarcopolitico
DEL ARCO POLÍTICO con Darío Del Arco 06-03-2025 Entrevistas a: Daniel Artana @ArtanaDaniel (Economista Jefe de FIEL) Emilio Apud @emapu (Ex Secretario de Energía y Minería de la Nación)
Carlos Fara @carlosfara (Analista Político, Consultor) Del Arco Político @DarioDelArco
Álvaro González @_alvarogonzalez (Diputado Nacional PRO por la Ciudad de Buenos Aires) Del Arco Politico @DarioDelArco
¡Ponte los cascos para escuchar nuestro nuevo programa diario! Presenta: Alberto Marcos (@albermg) ¿Cerramos la semana? - El Mundial de Ciclocross. - Debatimos, ¿quién baja mejor? ¿Mohoric o Pidcock? - La Volta a la Comunitat Valenciana y todas las carreras en disputa. ¿Qué canción nos recomiendas para cerrar el programa de mañana? Hoy nos despedimos la petición de José Bascuas, Alas, de Shinova. Nuestro grupo de Telegram: https://t.me/LaBicicletaPodcast