Periodista i crítica de televisió
2 min

TV3 has recovered the second season of Wise nature from the 3Cat platform to air during the summer programming. This time without the late naturalist Jaume Sañé, who was a key player in the format's first season. The show's role as a gifted teacher is evident. An attempt has been made to find a certain gender balance and to lower the average age to make it more inclusive.

Wise nature It's a type of entertainment that adapts to public service. Animal documentaries generally don't fail to stimulate viewers' curiosity. They may seem like dull or boring content from the start, but it's a good thing once you're hooked. However, as is common with popular content, with each wash we lose a sheet, and it has to be filtered through infantilization to make it more popular and accessible to all generations in the house. And this is when the program starts to become tiresome as the broadcasts accumulate: the comedy becomes tiresome. When Quimi Portet and Albert Pla comment on the documentary aspect with a certain amount of sarcasm, it's funny if you connect with their sense of humor. But the academic theatrics wear you down. And that's despite the magnificent setting of the Colegio del Rosario de San Julián de Vilatorta, which lends solidity to the staging. Perhaps it's effective if there are small children to entertain, because it has a battered or histrionic tone typical of children's programs. But for adult audiences, it's increasingly difficult to connect with this over-the-top comedy, where the adults behave like little children or are short on mischief, and the younger ones feign maturity and demeanor worthy of a grandfather. Perhaps scientific outreach or biology can clarify this television trend, or perhaps nature is sometimes not so wise. While creatures in the wild seem fascinating, humans on television end up provoking bewilderment.

And speaking of wild phenomena, it would be worthwhile for Lamine Yamal to bring back the show's opening. Imperfect future Andreu Buenafuente's show on La 1. This Thursday, the comedian began by talking about the player's birthday party. "When you've had a good season, you have to suffer for what the players do during their holidays. I'm more eager for Lamine Yamal's vacation to be over than for mine to begin!" Buenafuente asserted. Without hesitation, he summarized the headlines about the celebration and ended by sending a message to the player: "It's about young people making a better world, not about them being stuck with the worst of the current one."

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