Noelia Núñez's boomerang
On Thursday, the now former PP deputy Noelia Núñez, at the height of the scandal over his falsified resume, embarked on an unprecedented television tour. She lived up to her role as deputy secretary of mobilization and digital challenge and chose Mediaset as the platform to sell her version of events. She appeared on two Cuatro programs. She went to Everything is a lie –a very apt title in her case–, in which she had previously contributed. They interviewed her for almost an hour, and her constant ambiguity when talking about her studies was evident. She was vague again when referring to the credits she needed to complete her law degree, and they caught her in another lie: they brought back an interview in which she claimed she only had her final degree project left. She was also interviewed in On everyone's lips by Nacho Abad, the most unscrupulous news anchor on television. The man treated her very affectionately and indulgently accepted her arguments. His motto: "Live without regret."
Beyond Núñez's fallacies to justify the deception, at the end of the conversation with Nacho Abad an unprecedented event occurred: the presenter reminded her that the day before she would have been supposed to debut as a collaborator on the program, but since he had the collaborator of the program, but asIf your studies leave you time", she told him–. Of course, she accepted the proposal to be a collaborator.
It's amazing how quickly television becomes a space for express rehabilitation. A new revolving door that resurrects politicians who resigned due to scandals. Cuatro has already covered similar cases, such as the one in Madrid, also, like the one in Madrid, lying about her CV and she was caught stealing a jar of cream in a department store
Noelia Núñez is another example of how the media circuit rewards impact more than personal courage shame, she has managed her image by projecting herself again. And it is interpreted as the heroic act of showing one's face, a gesture that is often overrated. catapulted thanks to the screens, she had a meteoric political rise and, with a boomerang effect, she returns to the screen. Now more than ever she is a very popular narrative product.