The tension between Alessandro Lequio and Mar Flores’ family has been palpable for years. “I would tell my daughter: the further away from this man, the better,” the Italian recently said about Carlo Costanzia, the model’s eldest son.

The actor, finally, has had the opportunity to respond to the collaborator of Let’s see in a sincere interview in ¡De Viernes! in which he did not avoid any topic. During the interview, Costanzia expressed her discontent with the way Lequio has treated both him and his mother in public: “He was talking about my mother, whom he has sold out and criticized.”

The actor also took the opportunity to refer to the comparisons that Lequio made of him with fictional characters with negative fame. He thus responded to these comments with great serenity and asked him to have a more respectful dialogue: “Lequio is a person who does not know how to speak on a television set. I tolerate him very little. He only knows how to scream. “I would love to have a conversation if you had a calm tone.”

Costanzia’s criticism did not stop at Lequio’s communication skills; She also questioned the collaborator’s ethics by pointing out a contradiction in his actions. “I find it curious that a person who has dedicated his entire life to selling to other people, now judges and gives his opinion about people whom he then criticizes,” added Mar Flores’ son.

Additionally, in response to being labeled the “black sheep,” Costanzia provided a more positive view on being different. “Reflection to the world: Why is it bad to be a black sheep? Thank God, in this society different is beautiful,” she said. In this sense, she recalled that “we must give people second chances.”

While Lequio does not pass one on to the actor, Terelu Campos, his mother-in-law, has decided to give him a chance and meet him in person to find out if all the rumors about him were true. The verdict of the woman from Malaga is clear: she considers that her son-in-law is a good person.

So much so that Terelu wanted to send a message full of affection to Carlos Costanzia: “My mother had always raised me that we can all make mistakes and we have the right to rectify them. Life is full of corrections. And even more so when we can feel alone.”