The heifer of Grand Prix has launched a nod to the comedian, presenter along with David Broncano of and who first suffered one and, later, for showing during the broadcast a picture of a heifer from the RTVE program Grand Prix which simulates the image of the Sacred Heart of Jesus.
As journalist Ángel Munarriz explained in this article in EL PAÍS, Hazte Oír.
Miguel del Pozo, who is also a warehouse worker in a Bosch factory, where he has worked for more than 20 years, an athlete and the mascot of Delfín Ramiro in Estudiantes, has shared a photo on his social networks in support of the comical He posed dressed as a heifer Grand Prix and holding the image of Lalachus on a mobile phone showing the image of the character from the contest before the cameras of the public channel.
The image—with the toupee a little wet “because it had been raining,” he noted in response to an The photo had around 200,000 views early this Monday. In another comment, a user tells her that she could suffer harassment online for the photo. “Nothing, it’s not a big deal I think. Thank you,” Del Pozo responds.
Vox has registered a request for the president of Spanish Radio and Television (RTVE), José Pablo López, to appear in the Congress of Deputies to give explanations about the appearance during the broadcast of the chimes of the heifer stamp. “It saddens me that with the alibi of freedom of expression and the excesses of the holidays, TVE makes fun of the symbol of the Heart so loved by all Catholics,” said the president of the Spanish Episcopal Conference, Luis Argüello.
by Ángel Munárriz with the keys to how ultra-Catholic entities use this type of complaints to take advantage of their media and social media influence. “An example: there are countless headlines that Christian Lawyers achieved with their legal actions against Netflix for broadcasting a satire about a gay Christ, even though they border on legal nonsense. What has remained has been a prolonged use of the visibility offered to denounce the ideology woke. In this case, Abogados Cristianos denounced and Hazte Oír mounted campaigns demanding the withdrawal. A dynamic many times repeated,” explains the text.