You won't make Florentino Pérez angry.
I don't know of any journalism school that explains this precept, but the youngsters who want to enter this profession should be shown this Saturday's press and made to analyze how, depending on which media outlets, they cover all of Real Madrid's provocations, pressures, and threats to heat up the Copa del Rey final. The bottom line is that the poor white club has done nothing. They are mere passive and helpless victims. "A contaminated final," says the 'Ace"The final blows up," you can read on the BrandWhere is Real Madrid here as the subject of the sentence? Absent, of course. Finals blow themselves up, women die without anyone killing them, and Palestinians have a curious tendency to spontaneously disappear from the map. It's the same strategy of diversion applied to a realm that, fortunately, is more banal.
And then there is the blatant activism, like that ofOK Diario. Emetic headlines like "Now that's something to cry about: Burgos Bengoetxea's scandals against Real Madrid in the Clásicos," fired at someone who has denounced that his son is being harassed due to the pressure exerted by the club and its sinister resources. What headline do they dedicate to the Barça fans? "Barcelona fans fill Seville with esteladas, firecrackers, flares and insults in Madrid." And to the meringuesReal Madrid fans remember Pedro Sánchez and are clear: "Catalonia is Spain!" The putrid rumblings that have rocked the club's entourage through sympathetic media outlets that were keen to sell exclusive leaks as self-serving, ultimately provoking exactly what has happened.