Difficulty: Beginner
Mexico, Spain
In search of a room to rent, Isabel goes to meet with Karla, who is renting one out in a shared apartment. Isabel is delighted both with the place and the prospect of living with roommates of different nationalities.
Difficulty: Beginner
Mexico, Spain
Karla and Isabel teach us how to order the various varieties of coffee in Spanish as well as telling us about some of coffee's benefits.
Difficulty: Beginner
Mexico, Spain
Karla and Isabel tell us about the many activities they enjoy doing in their spare time.
Difficulty: Beginner
Spain
Comparative forms in Spanish are constructions that compare two or more objects or people's similarity or difference. This episode of "Karla e Isabel" focuses on comparatives of equality and inferiority.
Difficulty: Newbie
Spain
In this episode, we learn about Spanish superlatives, or adjectives that we use to state that a thing or person is superior to another.
Difficulty: Beginner
Mexico, Spain
Karla and Isabel provide us with clues about some popular musical instruments so that we might guess which ones they are describing.
Difficulty: Beginner
Mexico, Spain
Karla and Isabel teach us how to throw a house party.
Difficulty: Intermediate
Argentina, Spain
Goy plays guitar and sings for Karamelo Santa, one of the best ska bands in Latin America. Argentina is the band’s homeland (they are practically from the Pampas). But the 7 boys with wild hair and wild songs do not sing around a Gaucho campfire; their sound reverberates in the world’s largest cities.
Difficulty: Intermediate
Argentina, Spain Mendoza
Here’s the second part of the interview with Goy of Karamelo Santo. They are among the leaders of their home country’s independent music scene (Argentina). All their records were self produced—the major labels just weren’t interested in a band which plays free shows for the unemployed and pokes fun at the international monetary fund.
Difficulty: Intermediate
Argentina, Spain Mendoza
The guys from Karamelo Santo are not only great musicians enjoying success far away from their hometown—they’re also really humble and contribute to new bands' careers in Mendoza. They know how hard the path is, and they’re happy to share their experiences with the very people who recognized them first.
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