"This is the post that will cost me the most to write since I am in Readings because of what its protagonists have meant in my life: Alaska and Mario". Thus begins one of the hardest and most brutal posts that are remembered by Jorge Javier Vázquez. A post entitled Alaska and Mario, the great disappointment and in which the presenter is sincere and is truly lethal with the marriage of artists.

He recalls in this open letter to both that when he went to B.U.P he carried his folder lined with images of Alaska, he remembers the affection, adoration and admiration he felt for her, he remembers the support they both receive from the LGTBI + collective, and with those memories he criticizes with total harshness what Jorge Javier Vázquez describes as disappointment.

"Mario Vaquerizo was in Déjate querer and said: "My family has lived through a dictatorship and I now feel identified. You can't say what you think. We're supposed to have come a long way." Go. Do you think we can't say what we think? Then it seems that you hear little to your wife sharing a microphone with a being whose only known virtue is to vomit falsehoods and impute false crimes with the same ease that the numbers of the euromilló are dictated, "is the first blow to Mario and Alaska.

Jorge Javier Vázquez refers to Alaska's collaboration in Federico Jiménez Losantos' program on EsRadio and, although aware that this post "will mean that the biggest acoustic polluter in this country dedicates me a fantastic week", Jorge Javier Vázquez does not save anything. Neither for Alaska's collaboration with Jiménez Losantos nor for Mario's collaboration with Isabel Díaz Ayuso.

"Look Mario: it hurts my soul to see you eating kisses with a lady who said in the microphones where Alaska collaborates that it was a heaviness that the Pride week lasted a whole month, when precisely a large part of the people who adore both you and your wife belong to the collective, "he says. And he continues: "A lady who makes jokes of dubious taste about the trans law, which is the same as saying that she is laughing all over the face of the showgirls that Fangoria has taken on her tours. A lady who calls abortion murder, a lady who likes you because you're married to a woman but who would be unlikely to have hired you to promote the community she presides over if you were gay. Let's not be fooled, Mario. You can't be at everything."

"Honey, how could you do this to me? I, who would have loved you to the end," paraphrases the presenter recalling the famous song of Alaska. "I've run out of arguments to defend you, just as I can no longer find a reason to hold on to understand Alaska working with one of this country's biggest hate-mongers. In these times, selling ourselves the idea that being in that trench is also practicing freedom of thought is an exercise in balancing act doomed to failure. This Alaska has nothing to do with the Alaska I loved."

"But in the same way that Mario and Alaska feel free to embrace those who encourage involution and contempt for diversity, I cannot fall into the biggest mistake that according to Mario we are making lately: self-censorship. And forgive me for telling you, Mario: no matter how many times you repeat that you are "politically incorrect", you are not, "says Jorge Javier Vázquez.

And he ends with total forcefulness: "Elections are approaching. Difficult times. Both you and Alaska are doing very well in life. You can vote for whoever you want, there would be more. But he also thinks that freedom is very good when everyone can exercise it. And a lot of those people you hug don't seem to be very clear about that concept or fed up with reeds. They only understand it when it is designed by and for them. Your affection, but less."

According to The Trust Project criteria

Learn more

  • Jorge Javier Vazquez