The delusions of Miguel Bosé and Pablo Motos

Miguel Bosé on the program 'El Hormiguero'.
Periodista i crítica de televisió
2 min

Five months ago La Sexta broadcast a report in Research team titled Bosé, the denier in which they delved into the degeneration of Miguel Bosé's public discourse, obsessed with spreading all kinds of conspiracy theories. They also denounced the singer's collaborations with disqualified doctors and healers. public.

Paradoxically, this week, Bosé returned to television, in an interview on The anthill, from the same media group. His statements dragged on all week. The hypocritical strategy is the same as always: Miguel Bosé is invited, allowed to spout his usual nonsense, and then he serves as viral ammunition for all kinds of talk shows about his health and the nonsense he's explained. Afterwards, the world of bold reporting wonders how this individual continues to be covered, as if he were just another mystery.

In this latest interview with Pablo Motos, the presenter once again dwelled on Bosé's health. And, for the umpteenth time, we once again witnessed a whitewashing operation on the Renaissance of the artist, which is nothing more than pure speculative fantasy, the fruit of the character's delusions. The farce of the tooth infection returned and that the problem he had was "string closureBut Motos insisted on delving into his theory of life, asking him about all kinds of diets and treatments, and consulting him about his daily life, a heroic struggle. There's a morbid need to get him to talk about existential issues, as if Bosé were a philosopher dedicated to the therapeutic and soft world. Giving him the runaround, following his lead, and normalizing his attitude and theories is extraordinary and as dangerous as all the pseudoscientific garbage spouted by Bosé, who remains destroyed as ever. Afterward, everyone dips their bread and fusses. I would easily add: "With political correctness they want to turn us into a herd without personality.", said the presenter. And Bosé assured that we had lost the freedom that existed in the 70s and 80s. "The price one pays for being able to say what one thinks is very high," reiterated Motos. And that was said by two gentlemen in prime timeOne with his own show and a ratings leader, the other about to begin a tour of Spain and Latin America (and we'll see how it turns out). This is the price they pay and the coercion they suffer.

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