Podcast Summary: Más de Uno – "La España que madruga" (20/02/2026)
Host: Carlos Alsina
Panelists: Profesor Rodríguez Brown, Daniel Ramírez García Mina, Rosa Belmonte, José Casillas, Félix José Casillas, y otros
Podcast: Más de Uno (Onda Cero)
Date: February 20, 2026
Episode Overview
This episode of "La España que madruga" brings the usual blend of current news, sharp commentary, and humor that defines Carlos Alsina’s morning roundtable at Onda Cero. The panel tackles the breaking headlines in politics, social affairs, sports, and the international scene, with a lively repartee full of irony and wit. The episode is structured around a sequence of pressing questions, headlines analysis, spotlights on media coverage, economic snapshots, sports updates, and a lyrical recap, providing a thorough and entertaining start to the Friday morning.
Key Discussion Points & Insights
1. Satirical Portrayal of Early-Morning Journalists
- The episode opens with a tongue-in-cheek dramatization of Spanish journalists as heroic yet sleep-deprived champions of truth—“notarios de la actualidad”—sparking immediate playful bickering among the panel.
- Quote: "Renuncian a dormir para otear lo que trae el día." (00:05, Narrator/Host)
- Quote: “Sé todo acerca de los periodistas. Un regimiento de tipos tediosos corriendo de un lado para otro para que unos cuantos aburridos sepan lo que pasa por el mundo.” (00:19, Critic/Panelist)
2. Round of the Day's Big Questions ("Las Siete Preguntas y Media")
- Quickfire questions set the tone, highlighting the major controversies and trending issues:
- The potential resignation of Interior Minister Grande Marlaska and criticisms around his conduct. (01:49–02:05)
- The arrest of former Prince Andrew in connection with the Epstein case, and its impact on the British monarchy. (02:07–02:12)
- The enduring influence of ultra-left and right-wing party dynamics in Spain.
- Quote: “¿Puede ocurrir que los ultraizquierdistas con hambre de victoria vayan terminando votando al box?” (02:21, Journalist/Commentator)
3. Headline Review: Press Coverage of Major Stories
- Main International Headline: The arrest of Prince Andrew for involvement in the Epstein scandal, and its repercussions across European royalty.
- Panel reviews critical headlines from La Razón, El Mundo, ABC, and El País.
- Mentions involvement of Norwegian and Belgian royalty, indicating the broad reach of the Epstein network.
- Quote: “Si eso se prueba, el acusado podría enfrentarse a cadena perpetua.” (03:00, Radio Host/Panelist)
- Police Scandal: The show closely follows the fallout from the case of a police inspector who said she was sexually assaulted by her superior. Discussion centers on the lack of support and questionable official handling.
- Quote: “Interior pone escolta a la inspectora que denunció por violación al jefe de la policía.” (03:00, Radio Host/Panelist)
- Political Humor: Playful confusion between a weather system (“borrasca Pedro”) and political figure Pedro (possibly Sánchez), blending meteorology with political change. (02:46–02:57)
4. Social Issues: Housing Crisis and Political Hypocrisy
- Salvador Illa, leader in Catalonia, proposes legislation to curb speculative real estate buying.
- Contradictions are noted between political speeches and personal business practices.
- Satirical observations on party loyalty and conflicts, especially within Vox.
- Quote: “Abascal advierte de que será implacable con la disidencia en Vox… Quizá Abascal haya cesado a Ortega Smith también como padrino.” (05:01, Radio Host/Panelist)
5. Cultural and Social Snapshots
- Aging in Zoos: Coverage on animal welfare and euthanasia debates in European zoos.
- Measles Outbreak: Small but noteworthy resurgence in Madrid and Alicante.
- Tech and Youth: Zuckerberg blaming minors for lying about their age online, raising ongoing issues of social media responsibility.
- Quote: “Zuckerberg culpa a los menores de los riesgos de las redes por mentir sobre su edad.” (08:20, Critic/Panelist)
- Scientific Discoveries: New dinosaur species found in the Sahara—second spinosaur in over a century.
6. Economy: Business and Policy News with Satire
- Repsol boosts production in Venezuela; Inditex rewards employees; debate on speculative housing persists.
- Economic commentary brings in international context (Financial Times, Wall Street Journal, The Economist).
- Quote: “La persecución a los ricos va a conseguir poco dinero pero va a causar mucho daño a la economía.” (10:25, Economic/News Analyst)
- Economic commentary brings in international context (Financial Times, Wall Street Journal, The Economist).
- Economic Cartoon of the Day: A Cuban highway sign wittily proclaims:
- Quote: “Compañeras y compañeros, la miseria también puede ser revolucionaria.” (10:48, Economic/News Analyst, referencing Caín en La Razón)
7. Sports Update
- Big day for Spanish winter sports: Oriol Cardona and Ana Alonso win medals in the new Olympic event of "esquí montaña."
- Segue into football, basketball, tennis, and cycling news, with a motif of teams and athletes going “cuesta arriba y cuesta abajo.”
- Quote: “Formando pareja Cardona y Alonso pueden poner en lo más alto de nuevo al esquímo español…” (11:40, Sports Commentator)
8. Weekly Lyrical Recap
- A poetic review of the week’s news by the Venezuelan “poet” Abigail Lozano—a moment of satire and narrative flair covering police scandals, political critiques, and cultural happenings.
- Quote: “No muerte, sino vida. Es el martes de Carnaval.” (13:13, Economic/News Analyst quoting the poem)
Notable Quotes & Memorable Moments
| Timestamp | Speaker | Notable Quote/Moment | |-----------|-------------------------|---------------------------------------------------------------------------| | 00:19 | Critic/Panelist | “Sé todo acerca de los periodistas. Un regimiento de tipos tediosos…” | | 01:13 | Economic/News Analyst | “Buenos días. A pesar de Gobierno.” | | 02:21 | Journalist/Commentator | “¿Puede ocurrir que los ultraizquierdistas con hambre de victoria vayan terminando votando al box?”| | 03:00 | Radio Host/Panelist | “Andrés Mobatten y Windsor… detenido… por el Caso Epstein…” | | 05:01 | Radio Host/Panelist | “Abascal advierte de que será implacable con la disidencia en Vox…” | | 08:20 | Critic/Panelist | “Zuckerberg culpa a los menores de los riesgos de las redes por mentir…” | | 10:25 | Economic/News Analyst | “La persecución a los ricos va a conseguir poco dinero pero va a causar mucho daño a la economía.”| | 10:48 | Economic/News Analyst | “Compañeras y compañeros, la miseria también puede ser revolucionaria.” | | 11:40 | Sports Commentator | “Formando pareja Cardona y Alonso pueden poner en lo más alto de nuevo al esquímo español…” | | 13:13 | Economic/News Analyst | “No muerte, sino vida. Es el martes de Carnaval.” (from the lyrical recap)|
Timestamps for Important Segments
- 00:01–00:38 – Satirical introduction about journalists
- 01:09–02:47 – Panel intros, "las siete preguntas y media", and initial headlines
- 03:00–04:57 – Deep dive into press coverage: Epstein, police scandal, political weather/metaphors
- 05:01–06:51 – Social, political, and economic topics: housing, Vox, influential figures
- 07:18–09:22 – Belmonte's cultural round-up: zoos, measles, tech, archaeology
- 09:24–10:46 – Economic news and global analysis
- 10:46–11:07 – Economic cartoon of the day
- 11:07–13:03 – Sports bulletin: Olympic news, football, basketball, more
- 13:07–14:22 – Lyrical recap of the week (poetry session)
- 14:23–14:32 – Transition to hourly news
Tone and Style
The episode stays true to the signature "Más de uno" blend: incisive, fast-paced, and interspersed with wry humor. The discussion balances gravity (e.g., sexual assault allegations, royal scandals) with mockery and cultural references. The banter is playful and the language richly idiomatic, lending authenticity and character to the analysis.
Summary for the Uninitiated
If you missed the episode, this was a dense yet witty sweep through the morning’s front-page stories, political maneuvers, controversial cases, and both domestic and international oddities. The team’s chemistry delivers both depth and levity—turning complex political and economic issues into accessible and thought-provoking conversations, peppered with cultural anecdotes, sporting updates, and even a poetic sign-off.
