Jorge Javier Vazquez He has more free time than usual since he lost his job at Telecinco due to the cancellation of Save me and of Chinese stories in September. The one from Badalona, who this Monday presented the book of Pedro Sanchez, is aware of what is happening on television and also on different platforms. Among what he has seen lately, the documentary Maria Pombo.
So much so that he gave his opinion on the matter this Tuesday through X, the old Twitter: “Pigeon It reminds me a lot of those French movies in which nothing happens because the important thing is what doesn't happen. What is not told. What is intuited. What you suspect,” the communicator wrote.
'Pombo' reminds me a lot of those French films in which nothing happens because the important thing is what doesn't happen. What is not told. What is intuited. What you suspect. https://t.co/kVjbkHs4Hc
— Jorge Javier Vázquez (@jjaviervazquez) December 12, 2023
In his blog, he added that he has seen it to be aware: “You have to make the effort because otherwise you will become one of those painstaking people who looks at young people with half-closed eyes while thinking that any time in the past was better.” And he explained: “I have seen more life in a funeral home than in this reality show. It's like watching a plant grow. Which I find as disturbing as it is attractive.”
He also begins to value the relationship that María has with her sisters, Lucy y Marta: “There is a simmering rivalry between them that no matter how much they try to hide, comes to light in several sequences. They love each other but they watch each other out of the corner of their eyes. And they judge each other. And they criticize each other. And that they must have some historic fights, I take it to trial, what Rafa Mora would say. But none are shown. And that's what makes me flake. Because throughout the reality show there reigns a very impostered calm. Not a scream. Not a single outburst. Paper-mache emotions“.
On the other hand, give your opinion about them, the other protagonists: “As for the husbands, they are mere troupes. Pablo Castellanos, María Pombo's, is tender because he is so naive. Zamalloa, Marta's, is the supposedly ideal son-in-law and Álvaro, Lucía's, is that type of man who makes himself so funny that he doesn't make an effort to do it to others.”
Jorge sentences with one of his own: “The Pombo It is, in short, a summer camp for teenagers so white and so familiar that it is scary. I didn't finish watching it for fear that Victoria Federica would appear, who is a very nice and presumably very unfriendly girl who matches perfectly with all the reality countrymen.” However, she highlights something: “Praise be to the Pombos. Although they don't know it – and perhaps they don't like the comparison – they have a lot to do Save me why They are capable of keeping people hooked for hours, days, years, without telling anything at all.. And that, I know well, is something very difficult.”
In response, Jorge has received comments for all tastes: “I sincerely wonder who is interested in them. People with the same style and standard of living I suppose. Maybe I'm the strange one but there's nothing they say or share that I find it interesting” or “You don't even measure up to Maria's heel height. She succeeds both personally and professionally and you are a failure,” some have pointed out.
With this project, Pombo joined the trend of celebrity docuseries, as the Kardashians did in their day or Mario and Alaska. Recently, we also have the examples of Georgina Rodríguez, Tamara Falcó or David Beckham. Through Prime he shows his daily life with Pablo Castellano and his two children, Martin and Vega. In the docuseries, María even showed her delivery by cesarean section of little Vega, who was born in June of this year. Martín was born in December 2020.