Podcast Summary: “La actualidad de Cuerpos especiales - viernes 12 de diciembre de 2025”
Podcast: Cuerpos especiales
Host: EuropaFM
Hosts: Eva Soriano, Nacho García, Lalachús
Date: December 12, 2025
Overview
This episode of Cuerpos especiales delivers the signature mix of humor and irreverent commentary on current events, focusing on Christmas party overload, new travel requirements for the US, and a groundbreaking court case affecting festivals in Spain. The hosts, Eva Soriano, Nacho García, and Lalachús, riff on personal anecdotes, poke fun at news absurdities, and tackle everyday frustrations with cheeky banter.
Key Discussion Points & Insights
1. Navidad y la saturación de cenas de empresa (00:00–01:26)
- The episode opens with jokes about the excess of holiday parties and the fatigue it brings.
- The hosts discuss the idea of having a solo Christmas dinner as a form of self-reflection and escape from awkward social encounters.
- Notable Quote:
“Tengo ganas de hacer una cena de Navidad conmigo mismo… en la que yo mismo me cuento a mí mismo cómo ha ido el año, cómo estás.”
— Nacho García [00:31]
- Notable Quote:
2. Nueva normativa de EE.UU.: Historial de redes sociales para turistas (01:26–04:24)
- The show jumps into the news that tourists from 42 countries (including Spain) will need to hand over their social media history from the last five years to enter the US.
- The hosts mock the invasive rule, imagining the embarrassment of customs officers scrolling through their old, silly or private internet searches.
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Notable Quotes: “¿Qué es gente equivocada, o sea?”
— Eva Soriano reacts to the vagueness of the new security policy [01:55]“Tengo que ver cómo un señor de la aduana me ve como busco Leticia Sabater, primero con C, luego con Z.”
— Nacho García, humorously picturing awkward explanations at customs [02:23]“¿Where is the raccoon alcoholic?”
— Nacho mocks the absurdity of explaining weird saved memes to border control [03:34]
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- The hosts reflect on bizarre searches from the pandemic, like how to make a face mask from a dish towel, and the relief of just going to Spain’s Lago de Sanabria instead, where no one asks for your social media data.
3. Nueva sentencia: Se permite meter comida y bebida en festivales españoles (04:24–06:08)
- Discussion turns to a Valencia court’s ruling that bans on bringing outside food and drinks to festivals are illegal and consumer rights must be respected.
- Notable Quote:
“Un juzgado de Valencia ha emitido la primera sentencia en España que declara nulas las cláusulas de los festivales que vetaban el acceso con comida y bebida adquiridas fuera de él... estas restricciones son abusivas.”
— Eva Soriano resumes the news story [05:05]
- Notable Quote:
- Critique of festival organizers charging 3 euros for returning unspent wristband credit, with Nacho sarcastically comparing it to the US border ordeal.
- “Qué morro, tío. Y yo enseñando el historial de los últimos cinco años para irme a la Estatua de la Libertad a hacerme un selfie guarro que ni se ve bien.”
— Nacho García [05:31]
- “Qué morro, tío. Y yo enseñando el historial de los últimos cinco años para irme a la Estatua de la Libertad a hacerme un selfie guarro que ni se ve bien.”
- Joke about bringing entire meals (like paella or a camping stove) into festivals now.
4. ¿Llevar comida a los cines? Un melón abierto (06:08–07:16)
- Nacho uses the festival food ruling as a springboard to question cinema snack bans, lamenting the lengths people go to in order to sneak in candy.
- Notable Quote:
“Basta ya de llevar introducido en orificios de mi cuerpo 200 gramos de gominola.”
— Nacho García, exaggerating the smuggling efforts [06:12]
- Notable Quote:
- Eva, drawing on her experience working at cinemas, confirms it’s mostly about profits, not rules—and reminisces about moviegoers sneaking in gourmet meals.
- “Hay gente que va con gazpachos... que digo, a ver, qué está oliendo a fabada.”
— Eva Soriano [06:39]
- “Hay gente que va con gazpachos... que digo, a ver, qué está oliendo a fabada.”
- They mock the idea of people eating entire meals, with cutlery and plates, during serious films.
Memorable Moments & Tone
- The episode crackles with banter—hosts teeter between mock outrage, self-deprecating jokes, and satirical takes on bureaucracy.
- Their humorous hypotheticals (e.g., explaining meme searches at US customs) make global news local and relatable.
- The show closes on a light, comedic note, poking fun at over-the-top snack traditions in cinemas.
Timestamps for Key Segments
- 00:00–01:26: Overload of Christmas parties; fantasy of solo corporate dinners.
- 01:26–04:24: US visa rules and social media; pandemic-era memories; the freedom of local travel.
- 04:24–06:08: Valencia court ruling on festival food and drink; mocking festival wristband charges.
- 06:08–07:16: Smuggling snacks into cinemas; nostalgia and exaggeration about cinema food culture.
Conclusion
La actualidad de Cuerpos especiales delivers sharp, playful commentary on the quirks of modern life and current news. The blend of jokes, pop culture references, and relatable grievances keeps the episode fresh and engaging for listeners—offering both laughter and surprising insights into how rules and traditions shape our everyday experiences.
