Francis Cabrel in concert in Paris and on tour in 2021

As part of the publication at the end of 2020 of his brand new disc titled “At the Returning Dawn” (opus featuring the hit “Te Ressembler”, among others …), the ever popular Francis Cabrel will perform live during eagerly awaited concerts at the Folies Bergère (Paris) from January 13 to 19, 2021 at 7 p.m. then will be on a French tour indoors in early 2021 then in festivals during the summer of 2021: Festival Pause Guitare, Festival de Nîmes, Festival de Carcassonne etc. .

All the live appointments with Francis Cabrel scheduled for 2021 are listed on his artist sheet, accessible via the link below …

List of titles of the album “At the coming dawn”:
The beautiful moments are too short
Look like you
The melted candles
To the poles
Fort Alamour
Rockstars of the Middle Ages
People of the fountains
Let’s talk
At the coming dawn
Song for Jacques
I was listening to Sweet Baby James
Hard to believe
Ode to courtly love

:Source: Francis Cabrel in concert in Paris and on tour in 2021

The wine that has its own special day

Most French wines can be drunk any time (although breakfast wine is frowned upon) but there is one that has its own special day.

The third Thursday in November is a special day in the wine calendar – the day that the year’s Beaujolais nouveau wines become available.

Beaujolais nouveau is a primeur, a ‘young’ wine that is produced quickly and hits the shelves just a couple of months after the grapes are picked.

There are many types of primeur, but only Beaujolas nouveau gets its own special day – and this is due to nothing more elevated than a marketing campaign from the 1980s set up to popularise and promote this type of wine.

Beaujolais nouveau can be shipped earlier, but only goes on sale around the world on the third Thursday of November, and most years there are festivals to promote it with local events and ‘wine races’.

Hugely popular in the 1908s, especially in the UK, Beaujolais nouveau suffered a backlash from wine purists who labelled it an imbuvable (undrinkable) wine that tasted of bananas.

While it’s true that a lot of distinctly dodgy bottles were on sale during its heyday, especially abroad, these days many small producers in the Beaujolais region are working hard to ensure that their better-quality products get the recognition they deserve.

Within the Beaujolais area of eastern France, around a third of the grapes go to producing Beaujolais nouveau, while the rest produce wines with a longer and more traditional production time. However many prefer to be known by the name of the village or commune where they are produced, rather than Beaujolais.

Source: French figures: The wine that has its own special day – The Local

City Of Paris Is Fined 90,000 Euros For Naming Too Many Women To Senior Positions

Mayor Anne Hidalgo

Under Mayor Anne Hidalgo, 11 female and five male officials were appointed in 2018 to high-level roles — despite a rule that at least 40% of such positions should go to people of each gender.

The city of Paris has been fined 90,000 euros for an unusual infraction: It appointed too many women to senior positions in the government.

In 2018, 11 women and five men became senior officials. That meant 69% of the appointments were women — in violation of a rule that dictated at least 40% of government positions should go to people of each gender.

In remarks on Tuesday to the capital’s governing body, Mayor Anne Hidalgo said she would deliver the check to the Ministry of Public Service herself — along with the women in her government.

“So there will be many of us,” she said.

Since 2019, French law provides a waiver to the 40% rule if the new hires do not lead to an overall gender imbalance, Le Monde explains. That’s the case for the city of Paris, according to the newspaper: Women still make up just 47% of senior executives on its government. And female city officials are paid 6% less than their male counterparts.

But the rule change comes too late to avoid the fine.

“It is paradoxical to blame us for appointments that make it possible to catch up on the backlog we had,” Antoine Guillou, the mayor’s deputy in charge of human resources, told Le Monde.

Hidalgo, a member of the Socialist party who was first elected mayor in 2014 and was reelected this year, says the aim is to resolve an existing imbalance toward men.

“Yes, we must promote women with determination and vigor, because the delay everywhere in France is still very great,” she told the Paris Council. “So yes, to promote and one day achieve parity, we must speed up the tempo and ensure that in the nominations there are more women than men.”

“In Paris, we are doing everything to make it a success, and I am very, very proud of a large team of women and men who carry together this fight for equality,” Hidalgo added.

Amélie de Montchalin, France’s Minister of Public Service, lamented the fine and called the provision “absurd.”

@Anne_Hidalgo, the cause of women deserves better!” Montchalin tweeted. “I want the fine paid by Paris for 2018 to finance concrete actions to promote women in the public service. I invite you to the ministry to raise them!”

Source: City Of Paris Is Fined 90,000 Euros For Naming Too Many Women To Senior Positions : NPR

My favorite French books of 2020

I LOVE to read. It’s a very big part of my life, and I use books to help me better understand the modern world that we live in. So far in 2020, I’ve read around 98 books (not including the stories I’ve read to my son 50+ times ;)!) I know that there are some bookworms in my community, so I thought I would share some of my favorite French books with you today. Whether you enjoy fiction or nonfiction, chick-lit or more serious subjects, I’ve got a recommendation for you! Enjoy 🙂
Take care and stay safe.

Comme une Française

😘 from Grenoble, France. Géraldine