Has the Barcelona '92 trick with the cauldron been repeated at the end of 'Sálvame'?

Save me has said goodbye to the Telecinco grill through the front door. The afternoon program of the Fuencarral chain has said goodbye to all its audience with a very special broadcast. June 23 is always a very important date for the celebration of San Juan. For this reason, the space has wanted to have its own bonfire, in which they have burned all their secrets and have said goodbye forever.

The program began with all his collaborators entering the set dressed in white for the occasion and ready to enjoy these last hours to the fullest. And it is that all of them had been in charge of making 3,639 episodes in their more than fourteen years at the foot of the canyon on Telecinco.

During the more than four hours that this farewell special has lasted, many of the format’s most famous faces have gathered on set to reminisce about their best and bad moments on the show. In addition, other collaborators have been able to be in different parts of the capital and Toledo, surrounded by some of the most faithful followers of Sálvame.

The afternoon ended with the interpretation of an unpublished song, Borrón y cuenta nueva, the new song on the program, which has been composed with Alejandro Abad and in which each collaborator has had their stellar moment.

After the performance, the entire team went outside the studios to make the long-awaited bonfire. Some classified objects and documents, with various Save Me secrets about some of the most famous faces on the current scene, have been thrown into the fire to disappear forever.

The person in charge of lighting the bonfire in the distance was Antonio Rebollo, the archer who lit the cauldron at the Barcelona Olympics in 1992. Everything seemed normal, until Rebollo launched the arrow, which deviated a bit. of his trajectory. Even so, the bonfire has been lit, creating a moment that will go down in television history.

This moment has not gone unnoticed on social networks and has even come to remind one of the most historic moments in Spanish sport. And it is that what happened could have some similarity with the 1992 Olympics in Barcelona, ??where it was questioned whether the arrow would touch the cauldron, since only one shot was issued from a very strategic angle. Years later it was revealed that everything was orchestrated by Reyes Abades, a special effects specialist, who passed away in 2018.

So it is not surprising that the Telecinco program has also chosen to ensure the ignition of the bonfire regardless of the trajectory of the arrow and thus be able to end in style.

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