This summer there has been one of the most anticipated television returns of recent times, and it has done so with force. The Grand Prix returned to the screens of La 1 de TVE on July 24 with excellent audience data, which has been maintained in its second broadcast just one week later.

Although the Europroducciones format has kept its most mythical presenter, Ramón García, as well as some of the tests most remembered by viewers, a series of novelties have been introduced in its return. One of them is the incorporation of the streamer Cristinini to narrate the different games that face each week between two towns in Spain, a signing that not everyone has liked.

Since its premiere, social networks have been divided between those who thought it was right to have a profile like his, and those who considered their presence unnecessary commenting on the tests. The streamer herself spoke of these criticisms, many of them loaded with hate, although she assured that these were due more to the “format itself than by who does it.”

Since the harsh comments have not yet stopped, there are many people who have also wanted to come out in defense of Cristinini. One of them has been the also television Ana Pastor, who has used the same platform to support her middle classmate, although without mentioning her Grand Prix in her comment. “I’m crazy about the comments against Cristinini. Well, I like it, before and now,” Pastor wrote on her Twitter profile.

The reaction of the presenter of El objetivo is not accidental, and it is that Ana Pastor is also used to receiving harsh criticism for her work through social networks. One of the last moments in which the journalist had to face the ridicule of the platforms was after the face-to-face between Pedro Sánchez and Alberto Núñez Feijóo, which she moderated together with Vicente Vallés on the Atresmedia networks.

Due to these comments, Pastor has faced hate comments on multiple occasions, publicly denouncing the cyberbullying he suffers for practicing his profession. In this way, the presenter takes advantage of her exposure on the networks to call for the end of these practices.