Víctor Sandoval’s latest interview is giving a lot to talk about. In May 2023, Mediaset’s new leadership made the drastic decision to end one of its most emblematic programs, Sálvame, forever. A decision that caught the entire La Fábrica de la Tele team by surprise and caused one of the most talked-about goodbyes on the small screen.
Now, on the verge of completing the first television year without Sálvame, the former heads of La Fábrica de la Tele, Oscar Cornejo and Adrián Madrid, have embarked on a new television adventure with the launch of Canal Quickie, the first streaming channel in open dedicated to current events in the world of the heart.
A new audiovisual project that will premiere on May 15 and will bring back numerous faces from the Sálvame universe, such as Víctor Sandoval. The former Telecinco collaborator will return from Monday to Friday with the program Ni que fuerámos Sálvame. But before its premiere, Sandoval visited the podcast Querido hater, presented by Malbert, this Wednesday, where he has spoken openly about many topics from his former company.
In addition, the new collaborator of Canal Quickie has also taken the opportunity to attack Ana Rosa Quintana. Víctor Sandoval revealed that, in one of her live connections on the program, the presenter made a comment that did not sit well with her. “They hadn’t cut off my signal and I hear ‘it’s exhausting even on the phone,'” she said.
”How funny. Do you remember Ana? When you told me “tie your hands, tie your hands” because I’m a big fan of moving them, the collaborator said. ”Did Ana Rosa tell you to tie your hands?” asked the podcast host. Sandoval nodded his head and confessed that the decision to end Sálvame “was totally politicized.”
”Since political parties get involved in entertainment…because Ana Rosa being there in the afternoons is also a political decision. They will lift her up in September because she has already been sitting for a long time and she has to take a walk,’ she assured. In addition, Sandoval threw a final blow at Quintan in which he assured that his house “was prettier, cuter, smaller and with legal money.”