Saturday, July 28, 2007
Destilando Amor, 7/27/07: "So, What's Bugging You?"
Gavi bets her job that she can learn quickly whatever her new ogre of a boss needs her to in order to become the type of Girl Friday Extraordinaire that Demetrio of the Diseased Agave demands.
Aaron promises Rod that once he's back in Miami he'll make the necessary deposit of funds to reimburse the company for the loan. Rod shoots him a dubious look, "I hope you're a man of your word." Aaron extends his hand to shake on it. "You're talking with a true Montalvo," he replies. (Dunno, could be the jury is still out on that one.) Rod pointedly refuses to take it and explains, "I simply want to make sure the business is right as rain when my uncle comes back and takes over here again."
Aaron, nobody's stooge --except for possibly Minerva's-- now realizes he's been snubbed as well as had --as in slam bam and "Thankya, Sam." He knocks back the last of his whiskey then leaves in a snit. Rod sits back in his chair and wonders aloud how one of his own blood relatives could have ever treated him so vilely.
At Minnie's place, Patricio tells our little mouse that roared that he feels their ruse is working like a charm. Each day Aaron becomes crazier with jealousy. While she is wondering just how the heck she's going to stay couped up in her apartment for two months making her ex believe she's on a singles cruise around the world, the phone rings. Pat says it's a call from Spain. The house-keeper of a grand-aunt whom she's never ever heard of, named Concepcion Olmos, is on the line. It seems the old lady is gravely ill and fortuitously enough wants Minnie to fly to Spain to meet her before it's too late.
Aaron heads over to Oily's office. He gives Oñate instructions to continue the illicit exportation of doctored tequila as a little pay-back for for the ruthless end run reckless cousin Rod just made around him.
Back at Rod's apartment, Mommy Dearest is pacing the floor of Isa's and Rod's appropriately painted, blue bedroom. Isa tells Mommy Dearest how cold Rod was toward her the other evening. She feels it perhaps is on account of the huge unpaid debt Daddy now owes him. Isa says she is bearing up pretty well with Rod, but Daddy needs to get current, to give Rod a definite pay-off date; in fact she demands he pay off Rodrigo ahead of time because her marriage is in doubt otherwise.
Poor Nuria doesn't understand, so Princesa must explain that now they're living back in Mexico City where Gaviota lives too, the chances are good that Rod will run into her again. Once those two figure out what happened he'll divorce her sure as shootin' and then Daddy will no longer have his co-signer to back him financially. (Well, perhaps it's different in Mexico, but the bottom line is Rod signed on that bottom line. I'm bettin' he'll have to ante up whether they're married or not.)
Speaking of Ricky, he's is in Vegas and gambling huge sums of Rod's money in some smoke-filled back room with various Sharks and Whales. This time he's apparently on a roll and winning big. Question is: will he be smart enough to stop while he's ahead and get the hell out of there while the gettin' is good?
Disco Francisco and Sissy get off the apartment elevator. Ironically, she's bringing strawberry tarts to Isadora (sweets for the sweet and tarts for the.....well you get the picture). Frankie says he'll take advantage of her visiting Isa to take care of some personal calls. Sissy enters Isa's and Steffano appears at the doorway to his apartment.
Steffano is not a happy camper. "You're becoming a pain, Frank. You've taken advantage and those restaurant charges of yours are eating out holes in my pockets." Just then Mommy Dearest comes down the hallway and hears them arguing as she gets into the elevator. Once she's gone Frankie begs off by explaining he's marrying into the Montalvo family, a member of which, just happens to live in the apartment down the hall. "They're the largest tequila producers in the industry."
Frankie swears that if Steffano waits a tiny bit longer he will have plenty of cash to pay him back everything and more. Steffano bangs his fist against the wall. "How many more times am I supposed to fall for this?" Rod comes off the elevator right then. Frankie greets him by his first name and Rod absent-mindedly answers hello back. "See him? That guy's probably got the largest hacienda in the entire country." Steffano goes silent and mulls it over.
Rod walks into his apartment and greets his sister and Isa with about as distant a stare as ever. Pro-forma he remembers to ask after Isa's health and to kiss his sister hello. Seemingly lost in thought he curtly refuses to stick around, when Isa offers, for din-din with them and goes to the other room to work on whatever company business he brought home in his briefcase.
"See what I mean, Sofia?" asks Isa. The two women wonder if it's because Dani or somebody has spilled the beans by now. Sofia thinks not since Rod would literally have killed them both right off with that crazy temper he has. Sofia warns Isa that if he finds out he'll never forgive any of them for the part they played in ruining his plans with his little hooker.
Gavi gets home and tells Clarita she'd never guess who wrote one of her letters of recommendation to help get her the job with the Tequila Commission. She explains about the glowing recommendation Rod wrote for her. What bugs her though, is the possible reason behind it. Clarita wonders if Rod might have told Avellaneda the whole story. Gavi figures if that had come out Avellaneda would never have received her at the Commission, not even if she'd gone on her knees to him. "Clarita. It bugs me that Rod might be plotting something against me."
Back at the hotel suite Pammy tells Fedra that she's worried about the change she's seen come over Aaron and she believes it's due to his continued feelings for Minnie. Fedra says that's silly. Aaron and Minnie haven't spoken to each other at all since the divorce and he praises Pamela to the skies to her. Besides, Minnie is already off again and this time for a two month singles cruise around the world. Pammy and she just need to get busy planning her wedding and forget whats-her-name. She'll be up to Miami to help with it the first chance she gets.
At the same time, Aaron is down in the hotel bar knocking back a few more and remembering how Minnie so effectively told him off before leaving on her "cruise". Just then Fedra calls him on his cell and says she's still in the hotel and wants to talk to him. He hangs up to wait for her and grumbles to himself, "What guy did you latch onto, Minerva? Who are you having a good time with right now?"
Fedra shows up then. "What are you doing here alone and drinking?" "--I had a lousy day and I wanted to relax." "--Well, Pam needs you up there. She's not so sure you've forgotten Minerva. I told her that was long over, but, so have you?" He answers that he could care less about Minnie. "--Well, don't forget Pam's upstairs and needs you to take her by the hand and reassure her. Remember, Pam suits you and is the woman who's going to give you the boy we need." She leaves. Aaron's next thought, though, is about Minnie's taking that stupid singles' cruise around the world.
This same evening Francisco, that Dancing Disco-inferno, is at a really hopping nightclub with Sofia, but he seems lost in thought and moping. "You haven't set one foot on the dance floor tonight," she tells him. He says he is preoccupied with having the proper job. She offers him another loan. "No, it's not that! I cannot stand asking you for money. It's humiliating and goes against my principles (say what?) and my upbringing." (Ho, yeah. Just ask Momma Jose.)
Frankie pretends that he's worried about Sofia and him being able to continue their relationship from long-distance. It seems his only decent job offer (uh-hmmm) will be taking him to Japan, (Rubber waders were made for bull like this) but he is afraid Sofia can't or won't want to continue the relationship long distance.
"An international company wants me to manage their operation in Japan. Great salary, apartment, chauffeur, all sorts of luxuries." Sofia's eyes get brighter and brighter. He proposes they get married so that they'll be able to stay together. So, Pepe le Peu's "petite fleur" doesn't think twice. She scrunches up her little nose and eyes in glee and says "Sí."
On her bed Gavi is cramming like she's taking finals. She's reading and memorizing all there is to know about agave blights and pests. She names a few of the diseases and bugs that infest agave. "One of these beetles should be named 'Rodrigo Montalvo', ma. Just like a beetle bug he eats into the fleshy, main stalk of the plant and makes a delicious dessert of it. That's what he did with me!"
Across town in bed, beside a sleeping Isa, Rod dares to touch her belly and that baby of his. He stops himself though and is bothered that instead of feeling respect and tenderness for the mother of his child, he feels only resentment towards her since she also played a part in laying the trap they all set for Gaviota.
Next morning Demetrio is instructing Gavi about the parts of the world where certain blights common to the agave are present. He teaches her about the beetle that's infecting blue agave in Mexico and we get a short lecture on how the bug carries a certain bacteria that it deposits which causes the plant to wither and die. While they're going through this lesson about bugs, Rod arrives and knocks on the door, "Good morning." (So much for dedicating his life solely to his child and its mother, or his promise to Avellaneda.)
As soon as Gavi hears his voice she turns her face and tenses up at the unexpected sight of him. Rod gives her a very deliberate once-over with his eyes and then smiles sheepishly at her. She's breathless. He asks permission to speak with her a minute and they go into her office. He tells Gaviota he needs just a few minutes to talk to her. She refuses and says she has nothing to say to him. "Just leave, alright?" She returns to Demetrio, but her concentration is gone.
Aaron and Pammy are sleeping in this morning. She tells him how much she loves him. He simply says he needs to get back to Miami right off. She is saddened that Grammy P will never accept her. Aaron explains that his grandmother is very conservative but eventually will give in. He tells her that on the flight back he plans to make a stopover in Guadalajara to see her parents and formally ask for her hand.
Pammy is delighted. She begs him then to tell her that he loves her. Aaron asks her where this is coming from. She says she has to hear it from him. He says "Totally." She is a woman who satisfies him in every sense of the word.
Dani pays a visit to Bruno that morning also. Bruno admits to her that while he's been in the hospital he's had chance to think things through. He should have paid more attention to what she told them all. He should have put a stop to whatever Aaron was doing and should have relied on his personal judgment rather than getting carried away for sake of appearances. He feels he treated Mariana unjustly. Dani tells him there's nothing to be done about it now. Besides, Mariana will probably be happier the heck away from all of them in any event.
Sofia and Disco-'Cisco come to tell Pilar "the news". Grammy is impactada to hear that as soon as they are married they are leaving to live in Japan for 6 years. (Say what?) Sofia does a triple take and is just as impactada as Grammy, 'cuz she didn't realize they would be away that long from the family. "My Lord!" Pilar mulls it over. Frankie thinks to himself, "Now I sting the old woman." "--I realize this is unexpected, but don't worry. Your granddaughter will never lack for anything."
Frankie has really laid it on thick. Pilar considers him a gentleman who will always look out for Sofia's welfare, but she can't understand the need to go so far away. He says it just can't be helped and he wants her blessing. She gives it. He tells Sofia that if she doesn't want to marry him now, he'd understand. Although it means she'll be separated from the family, Sofia agrees to marry him anyway. In fact, she wants to tell Rod that evening.
A bit later that morning Gavi/Mariana asks Susana for a list of businessmen that Demetrio wants to set up a meeting with for the following day. Susana offers to take her around to meet them all personally and they can take advantage of the opportunity to have a bit of lunch as well. Mariana agrees and asks Susana if she can speak with Avellaneda. Susana tells her he's getting ready to fly to Brussels for an important meeting but she can try.
Mariana asks Avellaneda for five minutes of his time. She tells him she's anxious to know exactly what Rodrigo Montalvo may have told him about her and their relationship. He tells her he refuses to be a mediator between them and she really should talk to Rodrigo personally about it. She's insistent and persuades him. Avellaneda explains that Rod said only that he knew her a number of years from before he met his wife.
Gavi begs a couple more minutes so that she could explain exactly who it was that he just hired; and she wants to make sure he hears it directly from her. He agrees and Gavi/Mariana begins then to tell her side of their love story beginning with the first day she laid eyes on Rodrigo at Don Amador's funeral and why and how she arrived at Montalvo Corporation and how and why she eventually got thrown out of it.
Meanwhile, Rod is sitting in his Mercedes somewhere talking to his windshield again. "Gavi was right for treating me that way. It's understandable. If she had slapped or kicked me I'd have understood. It hurts me. It hurts so badly. How is it possible that a love so beautiful, so clean, so pure must have to be experienced in this way; condemned to be separated like this? And that it should have to end in such an absurd manner. How close we are and at the same time, how distant from each other."
Gavi finishes telling Avellaneda her story. He remarks wryly that Rodrigo's version was rather more concise, but he appreciates her frankness and now that he knows her history he truly admires her. However, he admits he does not want any problems with the Montalvo's, particularly since they don't even know he hired her. Gavi figures Rod will go gossiping to them. He's betrayed her once before but she won't let him again.
Gavi then asks Avellaneda if he perhaps knows what Rod's reason was for writing such a great recommendation. Avellaneda is a bit uncomfortable with all this and repeats that the two of them really need to clarify a number of things between themselves, and if she really wants to know the whole story she needs to talk to Rodrigo Montalvo herself. Avellaneda then leaves for the airport. Gavi is left thinking to herself that she would never be crazy enough to go looking for Rodrigo Montalvo to clarify anything. He gave her the brush off once already. He'd just throw more dirt in her face anyway. Screw it.
Labels: Destilando
I love that Gavi has this new job. With Montalvo Corp. in so much peril and Gavi involved with a competitor, this could be the chance she's been hoping for to crush the Montalvos like bugs.
Karen
At the table Rod says, "This is not an easy thing for me to tell you. Aaron said all sorts of nasty things about you. He poisoned my head..... [then a bit later] "I still haven't told you the most awful part of the story." "--Uh-hmm. We'll see!" She's not exactly convinced. "--The reason I came to hate you so much!" This gets her attention.
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Anonymous said...
Hi...can someone translate what the preview is for Monday. I saw Rod and Gavi looks like they were argueing while people was watching them. And what was Rod saying to Gavi when they were sitting at the table talking?
Sat Jul 28, 07:58:00 PM EDT
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Response:
p.s. When Gavi's walking with Susana he grabs her arm and says, "You have to listen to me! You have to hear me out at all cost."
At the table Rod says, "This is not an easy thing for me to tell you. Aaron said all sorts of nasty things about you. He poisoned my head..... [then a bit later] "I still haven't told you the most awful part of the story." "--Uh-hmm. We'll see!" She's not exactly convinced. "--The reason I came to hate you so much!" This gets her attention.
Permalink posted by Jardinera654 : Sat Jul 28, 09:48:00 PM EDT
Sure she's just a lowly assistant now, but I bet she gets promoted before long and is put in a position where she HAS to give the Montalvos some grief... even if she doesn't want to.
I guess it makes sense that Frankie wants a job with the Montalvos. Now if only he had some skills...
It's not so weird that some of us can understand Spanish but not speak it well. Most of the time, you need to know only a little bit of grammar in order to untangle and translate a sentence into your own language. Putting a sentence together from scratch is a whole different story!
Julie: ain't that the truth! That's the problem when you're not in a position to have to speak or write a foreign language. I guess there's a lot to be said for immersion.
P.S. Sorry , Anonymi. Let me improve on Rod's statement "él me envenenó la cabeza" a bit more, 'cuz I always get caught up on literal translation: "He (Aaron) filled my head with bitter thoughts..." sounds much better and more typical of the romantic way they express themselves in these things.
Frankie will probably end up in a scam against the Montalvos,once he marries Sofia.and continue hot & heavy with Isadora,who will be hanging out in the hallway. The end for for him cannot be too pleasant, I believe.
Aaron had just got his doctorate in Business and took over the MC Corp. directorship. He thought the company needed to expand its horizons and enter the 21st century with a top of the line tequila brand in addition to the others. Bruno was opposed to the high cost of financing this project to get it launched and profitable. So, Aaron fires Vid and hires a skanky shady lawyer in Oñate to work with bottling contacts to ship watered-down versions to places for premium prices without the Commission or the family knowing. The extra profits would cover the expansion costs. Bruno had to loan him 40% of the liquid assets to help him for the first year. Aaron conveniently forgot to repay the loan. Now with the diseased crops and the US bioterrorism embargos cutting into the regular priced stuff's shipments, placement and sales to long-time customers, the Tequila manufacturers are all on the brink.
Oh food for thought. Francisco says he and sophie will go away for a few years and she agrees. Maybe this is only so Granny pilar will offer him a job. She would be forced to do this so sofia can stay here???
Jardinera - I took three classes. Intro, Spanish one and two. Next is Intermediate 1 and 2. I must put about 5 hours a day in on spanish. Between two hours of soaps, my cds in the car spanish and my computer spanish program that I can speak to and listen to spanish speakers talk slower. I must be really thick. I did notice that that new program Timberichi is good with the captions. When singing, the captions are almost exact to what is being said at that moment, instead of a few lines latter. Maybe this will be the breakthrough. Looking at the people singing and out of the corner of my eyes, seeing their words. I can't find out what timberichi is though. I am assuming they are trying to find a new rock band???? I had trouble watching Lafea using the captions because I wasent watching her facial expressions and lip movements and I was at the point of just reading the captions. When I turned them off, I started picking up words again; owever, with the Timber show, the words are there at the same time they are being said. I find it a little easier.
My take on Frankie’s Japan story is that he’s counting on Abuela Pilar’s unwillingness to allow Sophie to leave and he’s expecting an offer to join the family business. I’m kind of surprised it wasn’t immediately forthcoming. It will be amusing to see his reaction if his plan doesn’t work (although I’m sure it will).
Rhonda: What part of St. Louie is the Hispanic part? It merits a visit.
It's like the saying "I don't have AADD I just...OMG did you see that squirrel?", but I am much better at my husband on non verbal clues, I can spot a fight about to break out..or hookup or things like that way before he can..Also really bad fashion
I think I've mentioned before that I'm fluent in a South Africa Dutch dialect called Afrikaans. I don't have a clue about the grammatical structure - subjunctive and that stuff - we just learnt it. But that it was compulsory to leant it at school for 12 years.
Also about the difficulty of understanding lyrics, I enjoy going to the Michigan Opera Theatre. They have subtitles - even when the opera is in English.
After 2 semesters at a community college, I'm trying to learn Spanish on my own. I got bored with learning only Spanish verbs. I'll see how far I can get this way.
So for me, with the limited vocabulary I can retain and capture both visually and audibly at my age, I feel blessed. At least I know if I had to live in a Spanish speaking culture I could survive and function pretty well, and now I know that within 5-7 years I would function superbly, huh! "/; ? ))
Just a note - English is my second language so I still have some limits.
Eve
No Valentin Lanus is not a new actor. He has been in novlas for at least 10 years although not usually as a lead. He has a lot of charm but doesn't fare well in intense dramatic roles. I too saw that program about Angelica Vale and couldn't place where they had worked together before.
Ret
Julie. I think you are right. When I am under pressure, I work my best. I would be mortified in a class where there is no English being spoken ROTF. That would probably be the best thing for me. The worse that can happen is I fail the class and lose $380.00. On the other hand, I might do well, or at least, after spending three months in that class, I will have learned to communicate better than I did at the outset of the class.
Ret
There is no "best" accent, that I know of. Accents vary widely, so if it's very important to you, I'd say pick a region and mostly listen to people from that region.
It's very funny that you mentioned slang - slang varies VERY widely. On Telefutura there's a game show called Que Dice La Gente, which my mother taped for me a few times. It's done in LA, I think, and it's a Latino version of Family Feud. Families on this show often have trouble, not because they aren't clever enough, but because "Latino culture" in the US is made out of lots of other cultures - Mexican, Puerto Rican, Cuban, etc etc etc. Since success on that show is based on familiarity with a COMMON culture, there's lots of stuff that can fall through the cracks.
And sometimes words on that show will cause unintentional hilarity - one time someone gave an answer which meant something really mundane in Cuba, but apparently meant "hickey" in Mexico.
So, again, you need to pick a region that interests you, and learn the slang from that region. And keep in mind that almost every word of slang you learn is probably going to mean something very different anywhere else. :)
tell her about the Novela (In Spanish of course). Since she's unaware of this blog even though I have to try to explain in Spanish, it's easy because I'm really using info from the recap. I feel a wee bit guilty when she tells me that judging by my progress, she now recommends watching novelas to anyone trying to learn Spanish:)
Then, last summer, I was excited to hear about the new (at the time) ABC series "Ugly Betty," and coicidentally, that same night I noticed La Fea Mas Bella in the tv guide. My suspicion that it was yet another version of Betty La Fea was quickly confirmed, and I determined to follow it no matter how hard it was.
But it was too hard, so I went online looking for recaps - that's how I found Caray. The recaps had been discontinued, but I was able to get up to date based on what had already been done. Then I volunteered to continue the recaps out of sheer selfishness, hoping that someone else would soon come along, take pity on my sad efforts, and take over. Amanda did show up not long afterwards, but by that time, I wasn't willing to quit, so we split them. And the rest is history.
At first, I recognized just enough vocabulary to barely scrape by. I was surprised at how much I knew, but also overwhelmed by how much I didn't know. I was able to pick up a lot based on context, and I learned all the important novela words quickly (jealousy, lover, boyfriend, it can't be, etc). But mostly, I struggled to figure out what they were saying (didn't have captions on my old TV) and spent hours looking up the wrong words.
Gradually it got easier, especially when I got a TV with captions, and now I don't use the dictionary nearly as much. It still takes me forever to do a recap, but that's partly because I have wireless now, which means I'm online the whole time, and I'm very easily distracted. :)
So that's the story of how I learned, forgot, and relearned Spanish. Like I said before, my relearned Spanish is mostly one-way - I was very good at both reading and writing back when I was in school, but without a teacher and daily quizzes hanging over my head, I've had little motivation to relearn the writing part.
Hope that answers your question: in my case, I relearned the language through brute force. :)
I got good enough to write Spanish recaps for Uni foros for 2 or 3 telenovelas, then went back to work and no longer had time to keep it up, so my Spanish grammar has definitely suffered since. Creative writing and spontaneous speaking uses a whole different set of skills and brain function, just like you mentioned, Julie!
My first language is Russian, I've been living in US for 15 years and for sure English is my second language. But I have really strong feeling for Spanish and, because of LFMB, watching telenovelas became part of my daily routine - I didn't miss a single episode of LFMB since I started to watch it in September ( thanks to DVR). I became a fea-holic. Now I'm watching Destilando.
I also have to mention that because of studying Spanish I became interested in Mexican culture, I also watch Aguilar's movies, listen to the songs etc.
I know from my own experience that language is a path to broader horizons.
So, I salute to all you, guys, who is studying Spanish and getting in love with new culture.
Eve
Eve--was English a harder language for you to learn with your Russian language background than Spanish is? I'm betting it was. You are to be commended for your versatility.
But now I have so many good resources to study Spanish, including telenovelas, so I'm having much more fun now. Sometimes I think that I have to find part time job in Spanish-speaking environment to practice but it's not really possible now ( I'm a computer programmer and it's hard to go back being sales clerk).
Eve
Here is the link to the series for those interested:
http://www.learner.org/resources/series75.html
I would try Amazon or Barnes and Noble online to get discounted workbooks for both halves only. On the website at the lower half of the page under "Liliana/Raquel's" photo is the list of each episode. To the right of each is a brown box. Double click and you can watch the episode for free.
So I try to immerse myself and read the captions and learn. Also I love the recaps and all the conversations on this site. It adds so much to the enjoyment of novela and there are so many new insights different opinions which makes it more interesting. Well enought from me. Love you all
and thanks for making my life more interesting.
AnnB
I can only reiterate what I felt comfortable doing and what we've all discussed doing here, like listening to Spanish radio stations and songs or the variety of talk shows, or news shows and telenovelas if you don't have Spanish-speaking friends or family. Buy some simple Spanish language story books and also Google Spanish newspapers and magazines to read online. Doing something daily increases your abilities little by little. : ? ))
I liked a classroom situation initially because it was structured and there was somebody to ask questions of and an opportunity to converse in the language and to think or write in simple sentences. Later I got bored with that and looked through grammar workbooks at the bookstore and bought those on my own. I learned a lot of extra vocabulary that way which helped me read and understand the C/C.
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