Martínez y Hermanos, the Cuatro program presented by Dani Martínez, receives different guests every week who undergo a very peculiar interview full of committed and personal questions that amuse and entertain the audience.
After a period on the Movistar Plus streaming platform, the space presented by the Leonese communicator has established itself with good data in the prime time of four, which is why the directors of Mediaset España are very happy.
In the last program, the guests of the evening were the prestigious Malaga singer Pablo López, the acclaimed actress Alexandra Jiménez and the great comedian, comedian and actor Julián López.
As could be read later on social networks, the spectators of the space were delighted with the interventions of the celebrities, since they opened up in the Cuatro space and spoke as if they were a group of lifelong friends.
At one point in the conversation, the singer of Your enemy, El patio, Hijos del verbo amar or My shoes know it revealed that he suffers from a strange condition that makes him have a very bad time on some occasions: empathic hypochondria.
The artist explained that he suffers physically when someone around him tells him that they have had some type of health problem. Said anxiety disorder makes him feel as if he also suffers from said problem, intervention, etc.
“I start to shake. Sometimes I even feel it in organs of the body that I don’t have (…) I touch myself and everything. That happens to me a lot,” he expressed, making it clear that it is something that conditions his daily life.
When Julián López began to give his opinion and comment that what he suffers is apprehension due to injections, punctures or operations, the singer cut him off with a phrase in a joking tone that made those present burst into laughter: ”I’m getting dizzy from listen to you”.
Jiménez acknowledged that she also suffers from this condition and shared a specific episode in which a girl had an accident: “She was lying on the ground and nothing happened, but she felt that her neck hurt a lot. When everything happened, I “I went to get my car and I couldn’t move because of the neck pain I had. Honestly, it felt like a brick (…) These things are like that. Suddenly I absorbed it as my own, you couldn’t be more stupid.”
The interpreter reassured the audience by explaining that it is something she has learned to control over time: “I have enough control in not making myself ridiculous more than necessary, but this does not take away my hypochondria. I have found the measure between what I It seems fair and normal, like wanting to know more about what’s happening, or calming down until it goes away.