La Roca had the presence of Pitingo this Sunday, although apart from music the interview also took other courses, including his controversial opinions on politics. So much so that his positioning has earned him numerous criticisms, but to the point of suffering threats and boycotts towards him.
“We have to go vote en masse to remove this shameless, evil president who only loves himself,” he wrote in
“I have never been satisfied with anything, nor have I thought the same as people, nor do I plan to think the same as people,” Pitingo began by saying during the interview in La Roca. “I’m going to do my thing and I may or may not be right, of course, but I’m not going to change my way of thinking. Why am I going to change my way of thinking?” the singer asked himself.
Of course, Pitingo was clear: “We are in a moment in which it is dangerous to talk about politics.” To which Nuria Roca pointed out: “You must have had some headaches.” “Yes, and you threaten my son,” she confessed. “And how have you handled it?” the presenter wanted to know.
“They called me on my wife’s phone number and threatened that they were going to give her a gift and so on and that I should not talk about politics anymore. I went to the police and it turned out that they had called from a call center. So I gave her two months of escort. to my son just in case,” said the artist.
“In the end it was an 18-year-old girl and I didn’t even report it. And I could have reported many more people because I have been called a ‘Nazi gypsy’ and I say: ‘Whoever says that is an idiot,'” he made it clear. Here Juan del Val intervened to add: “I can assure you that it is.” To which Pitingo criticized with: “It is such an absurdity.”
Among the comments that the artist continued to make: “I have never mince words, to be honest, and politically I had never gotten involved. What happened is that later I saw things that I said: ‘I have experienced them.’ I said about Bildu, that I did not agree, well listen, I have lived in Civil Guard barracks all my life and I have lived with the photo of Otegui there all my life in search and capture.”
“Now you can say whatever you want,” Nuria Roca pointed out. And, to finish, Pitingo concluded by pointing out the boycotts suffered: “The number of attempts that have been made to stop me from singing in places or not going to places has been a barbaric thing, one day I will tell it all.”