Marisa Martín-Blázquez is one of the most popular faces of Mediaset. The journalist currently collaborates on some of the most important programs on the Fuencarral network, such as the afternoon program presented by Ana Rosa Quintana, TardeAR, Joaquín Prat’s morning program, Vamos a Ver, or the weekend program, Fiesta. 

But despite the good professional moment she is going through, the collaborator has faced a terrible loss in recent hours. As she herself reported this Wednesday, May 22, through her social networks, one of her best friends from childhood had died from a serious illness. 

”Dear María, dear Zulueta, you just left and I already miss you. The truth is that I have been doing it since that terrible day – just a few months ago – when you were diagnosed with something incurable. At that moment we all began to want to have hope, knowing that, although they say it is the last thing to be lost, we began to lose it, just as we began to lose you. And look, we resisted…” he began by saying.

Despite the hard blow that the loss of her great friend has been, the journalist refuses to be sad because she knows that “that is, exactly, what she would not have wanted.” ”What you want is for your family, your friends and all of us who are part of your life to remember you with the joy that ran through your veins,” she declared. 

Furthermore, Marisa Martín-Blázquez confessed that her friend was going to continue to be very present in their lives: ”La Zulueta, the most happy and optimistic person in the world, the one who has been in our lives since we were teenagers, leaves us physically, but “She will always be with us.”

To say goodbye to her, Antonio Montero’s wife published a tender image of María accompanied by a text in which she also wanted to define her close friend in a very special way: ”María, we are going to miss your smiles so much and your laughter, your way of seeing life in that way, that only people who enjoy it like you know how to do it. And, precisely for that reason, we are going to celebrate you every day that we are still down here.”

Nor has he wanted to forget all the moments he has been able to live with her, such as “dancing sevillanas with Ana at Lagasca’s house when we were kids.” You cooking to celebrate a party for whatever reason. You smiling and happy with the arrival of your four fantastic children. You helping whoever needed something. You, always happy and celebrating life.” 

Finally, the journalist also wanted to have a few words for her great friend’s five children. ”We will take care of Javier, María, Inés, Gabi and Jaime, although no one has done it better than you and you will continue doing it from up there. We will take good care of Ana; your other half, your soul sister,’ she confessed.