The end of ‘Save me’ is inexorably approaching, and with each passing day the news related to the program is more and more curious. From the possible new Netflix format to the magazines that will replace it, including the preparations for this Friday’s grand finale. Even so, the team continues to give its current pieces, such as the death of Mari Carmen and her dolls. A piece of news that has left a moment that is less striking.

In full coverage of the arrival of the comedian’s remains at the Aravaca funeral home, Belén Esteban wanted to make it very clear that she already had everything ready for when her time came. Without interrupting her too much, María Patiño has proposed that the collaborators explain what they wanted to happen with her remains. Belén has been her first, imploring her husband to ignore her mother’s ideas and for her to be cremated.

For his part, Kiko Matamoros has stated without any problem that he doesn’t care what they do with him. According to her statement, she does not want her partner or her family to spend “a lot of money”, she simply wants them to incinerate it and throw it away anywhere. She highlights the forcefulness of his response to having recently married Marta López Álamo, this being a topic of conversation that may come up at some point or another throughout the marriage.

Continuing with the rest of the collaborators, Rafa Mora has affirmed that he had never raised this issue. She claims that her mother is the one who handles all matters of death and funerals in the family, so it’s not like she wants to know much about these matters either. Given the fervent requests of Kiko Matamoros and Belén Esteban, who mentioned places like Ibiza or Valencia, the former contestant of ‘Mujeres y hombres y viceversa’ has opted for these parts.

The one who has left the most surprising option has been Lydia Lozano. The woman from Madrid has been very blunt with her decision and has left a controversial reaction. Like the rest of her classmates, she would choose to be cremated. In her case, but she, she would like the ashes to be scattered around the Plaza de Colón. Her reasons, given the disbelief of Matamoros and Esteban, is that Colón “is where everything happens.” Given the impossibility due to regulations, she chose another forceful idea with the La Palma volcano.

dynamics of the ashes has followed in the other participants. Carmen Borrego would opt for her ashes to end up in her father’s brotherhood in Malaga, Pilar Vidal with her son so that they would be buried together, Adela González would like to scatter them over the Peine del Viento in San Sebastián and María Patiño would choose to distribute them: one half with her parents in their village and the other in the biggest theater in Spain they can.