Lamine Yamal revolutionizes 'Noches sin ficción' and shoots to a season record
The documentary aired this Tuesday reached a 16.7% audience share.

BarcelonaRevolution 304 It premiered this Tuesday on TV3 and led its time slot with an audience of 310,000 viewers, a 16.7% audience share, thus surpassing the second-choice program in the time slot by 7 points. prime time, The revolt, which with Lia Kali's visit reached 179,000 followers and 9.1%. With this episode, Nights without fiction has achieved the highest consumption figure of this season.
The documentary was born when Bernat Muñoz, a student from Mataró who lives in the Rocafonda neighborhood, had the idea of doing his research on one of his most famous neighbors, the Barça star Lamine Yamal. The piece goes beyond the work and finds other people of African origin to talk about racism in Catalonia, demanding equal opportunities for all.
The other protagonists of the documentary are the actress and singer Yolanda Sey, the actress and Gaudí Award winner Tamara Ndong, the content creator known on social networks as Wiz Problem Mohamed Lamine and Catalan teacher Amine Toumi; all Catalans, children of African immigrants, except for Ndong, who was adopted but still maintains a relationship with her biological parents. The documentary also features students from the multicultural neighborhood of Rocafonda, debating, and former FC Barcelona player Lilian Thuram, who address the topics of racism, immigration, equal opportunities, and the future.
The title Revolution 304 refers to the 304 that Yamal makes with his fingers every time he celebrates a goal, and which are the last digits of the postal code of the Mataró neighborhood of Rocafonda, where he spent his childhood, and where Fátima, his grandmother, still lives. "I only ask that the people of Rocafonda have the same opportunities that I had," says the player.
On Thursday, March 13, the Non-fiction It premiered at the Teatro Monumental in Mataró, and was followed by a discussion attended by Toumi, Sey, Ndongo, and Wiz Problema. The soccer player apologized for not being able to attend, but sent a video in which he said: "We must fight so that, in the future, we will all be truly equal," and invited all attendees to support the "304 revolution." Content creator Wiz Problema commented: "Lamine Yamal's 304 is a global movement, because what happens in one neighborhood now happens in all." Xavi Torres, director of the report, explained at the presentation: "Revolution 304 It's a documentary that reveals what lies behind the very gesture Yamal makes every time he scores a goal. And this gesture has to do with issues from the outskirts, with issues of racism, immigration, equal opportunities, the future of an entire youth and his generation, who don't have it easy."
In addition to Torres, the documentary is also directed by Jesús Muñoz, Carles Das for the documentary Unzué. Juancar's last team. He Non-fiction It ends when Muñoz gives his research paper to Yamal, and the soccer player reflects: "There are many people from the neighborhood who, because they haven't had the opportunities I've had, haven't been able to achieve what they wanted to be. It's a message for them, that if they try, they can also get where they want."