The exclusive of the magazine Hello! With the cover of the wedding of the year between Tamara Falcó and Íñigo Onieva, it took over newsstands across the country this Monday. In fact, around 10:30 in the morning there was not a single copy left on the street. They had run out. However, from that moment on, illegal copies of the magazine began to circulate on WhatsApp.
So much so that the management of the header has assured that it will take legal action against Meta, the company that runs said application, by allowing the circulation of the pirated version. And it is that thousands of people throughout Spain have received the document in PDF, including a viewer of the Sonsoles Ónega program, who confessed it live. And the presenter’s reaction leaves no doubt about what she thinks about it.
“How can it be that an exclusive kept with so many padlocks ends up on mobile phones throughout the country?” Sonsoles Ónega asked the commentators on her program on Antena 3 Televisión. Before anyone present answered the question, the presenter turned to the stands after hearing a comment.
“Don’t tell me you,” the journalist told a spectator sitting in the audience. “Ma’am, did you receive it?” She wanted me to confirm. Given the positive response, which could not be heard from home because the woman did not have a microphone, Ónega said “you received it.” And she added: “This is the mother of the lamb. And you know ma’am…”.
This was when Miguel Lago, one of the best-known comedians and collaborators of the program, interrupted the presenter to release a: “He’s going to go to jail.” What caused the laughter of those present on the set. “Do you know, ma’am, that right now there are two members of the National Police here and they are going to take her away?” He blurted out sarcastically.
“How can you think of saying that you read it on the phone?” Ónega pointed out as a rebuke. “So she’s going to leave the set… Lago is right,” she assured while emulating that they put the handcuffs on her.
However, after these moments of laughter and humor, the journalist wanted to send a message of support to her colleagues from the magazine Hello! and also to raise awareness on the subject of piracy. “Many journalists make a living from this thing and if we don’t pay for the work, we have a very big problem,” said Ónega.