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A resort for all seasons?

BrazilianLiving to appear soon
Interested in real estate and expat life in Brazil? Looking for practical information on buying a second home or making the most of your stay in the country? UruguayNow's sister site, BrazilianLiving.com will go live in November.
And the winner is… Results of the UruguayNow awards for 2010
They may not quite be the Oscars, but UruguayNow has its own awards, six in all, for 2010. We hope that our pale-blue certificates (sorry, but there are no shiny gold statuettes for the moment) will serve as a recognition of excellence in the country's hotel and restaurant sectors. The research was carried out between December 2009 and March 2010. Journalists requiring more details of the selection and award criteria should mail Nick Foster, publisher of UruguayNow at nick@uruguaynow.com. The awards ceremony took place at the headquarters of Uruguay's National Tourism Ministry in Montevideo on 13 April 2010. Our thanks go to the Ministry for their precious support of the UruguayNow travel guide project. The award winners are:
Best-Value Hotel in Montevideo: Regency Golf, Punta Carretas
Best Business Hotel in Montevideo: Sheraton, Punta Carretas
Best Restaurant in Montevideo: Francis, Punta Carretas
Montevideo's Most Innovative Dining Experience: Rara Avis, Ciudad Vieja
Best Boutique Hotel in Punta del Este: L'Auberge
Best-Value Boutique Hotel in Punta del Este: Posada Aldilá
You can find out more about these establishments by visiting the Montevideo restaurants, Montevideo hotels, and Punta del Este hotels chapters of the guide.
Our top web picks
Not yet made it to Uruguay? When you're done with UruguayNow, our choice of the top 6 internet resources for the country is just a mouse click away. In no particular order, they are:
Ola Uruguay: www.olauruguay.com
Mercopress: http://en.mercopress.com/
Benjamin Gedan's Small State: http://benjamingedan.blogspot.com/
Retired in Uruguay: http://wallyinuruguay.blogspot.com/
Uruguay Natural: www.uruguaynatural.com
Global Property Guide: http://www.globalpropertyguide.com/Latin-America/Uruguay
For reviews of these sites, please click here.
UruguayNow in the press
UruguayNow's mix of travel and tourist information on Uruguay, hotel reviews for Montevideo and Punta del Este (coming soon for Colonia), restaurant reviews and tips on excursions, sightseeing and lifestyle in Uruguay has been featured in El País, La República, MercoPress and on Uruguay's Channel 5 TV and other news media in the country. Look out for features on cinema and movie-making, estancia tourism, Uruguay's best beaches and Uruguayan wine (and tips on the best bodegas to visit) in our next edition in October 2010. Journalists interested in finding out more about our Uruguay travel guide project should mail nick@uruguaynow.com.

Blast from the past
Uruguay's Nostalgia Night is a national excuse for a huge party
Keen on Kim Wilde? Ready for some REO Speedwagon? Or would you rather stretch your limbs to a high-volume rendition of YMCA?
If your answer is "all of the above" then think about grabbing a piece of Uruguay's unique Nostalgia Night celebrations.
The roots of Nostalgia Night go back to the late 1970s. A disco in town looking for an original wheeze to attract custom on the night before Uruguay's Independence Day holiday decided to play nothing but oldies (in this context, music from the fifties and sixties). At the time, Uruguay was living through the dark days of dictatorship. Legend has it that the disco was packed out.
Since then Nostalgia Night has become a massive popular and commercial success. Every 24 August local radio stations – whose output year-round is dominated by hits from the 1980s as it is – ensure that every tune they play is at least twenty years old. Function rooms throughout the country prepare elaborate parties. Fancy dress is de rigueur: think John Travolta's white dancing suit, think big hair, think leg warmers.
This is the biggest night out in the year by some distance and a godsend for stressed parents and older folks. "Middle-aged Uruguayans don't have so many possibilities to hit the dance floor and let their hair down," says Montevideo translator Jorge Meyerheim. "It's basically just weddings and fiestas de quince (the Latin tradition of offering a party to girls when they turn fifteen). So it's not difficult to understand why they grab the chance to have fun on the night before a public holiday when everyone is off work."
Local websites list the entertainment on offer this year. Neighbourhood parties in working-class boliches (dance halls) charge as little as US$5 a head for a ticket. One or two make "good security" a prominent feature of their offer – a sign of the times perhaps. But others are more elaborate affairs (full barbecue! imported whisky!) with unlimited food and drink and, of course, live music – often a Beatles tribute band. For these, expect to pay US$180 and more per couple.
At the beginning of this new decade, the Cantegril Country Club in Punta del Este is daring to promise "the best tracks from the 1990s". But they are in a minority – for now.
Are Uruguayans more prone to nostalgia than other Latin Americans? After all, Brazil has no equivalent celebration, nor has Argentina. Perhaps the experience of young people growing up in the 1970s and 1980s has something to do with it. Unusually, this was a generation with less optimism than that of their parents. For the latter the relative prosperity and wellbeing of the 1950s (the tail-end of the mythical "Switzerland of South America" period) amounted to a golden age. Meanwhile, shanty towns were mushrooming on the fringes of Montevideo. The middle classes had to ditch their trips abroad. Were those youngsters encouraged by their parents – nurtured, even – to look back? Economically, of course, today's Uruguay is on a roll. But is nostalgia an old habit that's hard to kick?
It's something to ponder as you walk home from your party in the chilly dawn of 25 August with Smoke On The Water ringing in your ears.
Factfile: You can find a list (in Spanish) of Nostalgia Night events at www.clubdeturistas.com.uy/fiestas_24deagosto.html.


