

On Tuesday, Pablo Motos interviewed Nacho Cano in The Anthill to promote his show. But it wasn't exactly the musical side of things that interested the host. Aware of the artist's ideologically delusional trajectory, he wanted him to unload his anger on political issues. On the other hand, the Mecano member knew perfectly well that alongside the plush ants he'd find the perfect environment for spewing his conspiracy theories, and he already entered the set with a mysterious book under his arm. The show has become just that: a hotbed of characters unleashing their reactionary side against Pedro Sánchez. The Anthill It serves Motos to enhance this idea of a community oppressed by the absurdity woke.
Right from the start, he asked about his police arrest last year, accused of hiring illegal immigrants from Mexico. And here began a slow and surreal account of how his altruism was decapitated by the state's sewers. He recounted connections between police officers, with individuals who secretly entered his house and agents who apologized for participating in shady missions against him. All the key names came up: Sánchez, Marlaska, Óscar Puente, and even Begoña Gómez. He claimed that it had all been orchestrated to coerce him, after he supported Isabel Díaz Ayuso. "This is the way Mr. Sánchez, Marlaska, and everyone around them, both above and below, work."He claimed that he was making this complaint to do us all a favor: "I care about Spain right now, and I care that you all know we're screwed."Cano caressed the book he'd left on the table as if it were a Bible. And after warning us about the government, he picked up the book, written by a military founder of the Civil Guard: "This is the Civil Guard booklet written by the Duke of Ahumada in 1845. It's a code of honor that I recommend everyone read because I firmly believe that the only ones who are going to get us out of this ruin are these people."Motos said nothing. A military coup was called for on his radio show, and he stood petrified, like those rabbits blinded by car headlights. Cano continued: "We are governed by a criminal gang with networks we don't know about, financed by people we suspect but don't know about."And Motos, in response to these comments, simply asked: "During all this time you were going out on the street being suspicious?". He must be poor in comprehension or limited in his discursive resources. This is the level of the presenter who turns his family entertainment program into a playground for the most rancid right-wing, and can't even process the nonsense they spout live.