The former collaborators of Sálvame are already in the American continent recording the new Netflix audiovisual project that will hit our screens the next television season.

After the former Telecinco workers discovered that the new leadership of Mediaset España was going to cancel their program and that they would all be on the streets in a matter of days, the producer of Sálvame, La fabrica de la Tele, received an offer from the platform streaming to carry out a project with some of his collaborators. This is how Víctor Sandoval, Terelu Campos, María Patiño, Kiko Hernández, Lydia Lozano, Belén Esteban, Kiko Matamoros and Chelo García Cortés headed to America to record said docurreality.

After participating in some shows in Miami, the collaborators are undergoing long days of recording in the United States. Terelu Campos wrote about all this in her blog for the magazine Lecturas, a space where she left great headlines like this: “Shooting in Miami is the hardest thing I’ve ever done.”

”We have already started our American adventure […] I want to tell you that it is something that we are doing with a lot of emotion and knowing that it was going to be the toughest shoot of our lives. It all started on July 19 at five in the morning, the time at which I woke up to be able to be at the Adolfo Suárez Madrid Barajas airport at seven in the morning, where the entire team had met to record our entrance. What nerves, by God!” began to write the daughter of María Teresa Campos.

”When we arrived in Miami, going through passport control was the biggest ordeal. For us to leave, we just need to get a kick in the ass, but to enter the country we waited almost two hours. Mother of God! As soon as we left the airport, the press here was also waiting for us. It was something that did not surprise me because I already experienced it in 2016 when we recorded Las Campos and we came to Miami,” said Alejandra Rubio’s mother.

The television presenter assured that she has been without sleep for more than 24 hours and that it is being an exhausting experience, but that they are working very hard so that everything goes well and people get hooked: “Oysters, this is more difficult than that I though! In the end, I think that how each one of us is coming out. We are different, each with their own style, and I think that is the charm of what we are doing.”

Lastly, the communicator said that they work in a lot of heat and that the premises have very strong air conditioners: ”We work in the most infernal heat that you can imagine. (…) I cannot describe to you in words what we are going through. At half past six in the morning there is a fire in the street. Here they don’t know the middle ground, because you enter the premises and it seems that you are in Siberia”.