Violeta Mangriñán is back in the news. The young influencer moved to Valencia, her homeland, a few months ago to raise her daughter, Gala, far from the capital in a beautiful house that she built to her liking.
After traveling to Madrid day in and day out for a while, Fabio Colloricchio’s girlfriend has realized that the most sensible thing to do is to return to live in the big city so as not to spend so much time separated from her little girl. Although they are still thinking about it, she has advanced in her Instagram stories that it is very likely that this will happen and that they will make a decision for the month of September.
She was also in the media spotlight just a week ago due to her words in defense of the soccer player Vinicius Junior, since she is from Barcelona and from Valencia, the place where the Real Madrid player was insulted.
Fed up with the criticism, Mangriñán affirmed that racism and xenophobia is something that goes beyond the colors of a soccer jersey or a city, that it is a social scourge and that he would always position himself in favor of the people who suffer from it. , although in this case the Brazilian is also a friend of her boyfriend.
But this is not all. Violeta has sowed controversy again after she was asked some questions at an event about the role of women and men in society and stated that she agreed with the motto “neither machismo nor feminism.”
After the wave of messages calling her attention to these statements and after a few days reflecting on what she said, the Valencian content creator has decided to take a step back and explain that she was wrong to express herself because she was “very nervous”.
“The other day at the Vanitatis event, when I passed the photocall they gave me an interview with very uncomfortable questions about my personal life, I got nervous and I explained myself badly,” the Valencian woman began by saying and later affirmed that what she did not defends are radicalism and generalizing that “all men are equal.”
”For me, feminism is equality, but I would never compare it to machismo, MATA machismo, not feminism,” the influencer stated clearly and forcefully before her more than 2.2 million followers.
The life of content creators and influencers is loaded with privileges that other people cannot even dream of, but there is also a part of this profession that nobody talks about and that greatly affects the mental health of people. protagonists.
Social networks, media pressure and public overexposure mean that every day hundreds of people who are dedicated to this trade receive thousands of messages from people questioning their day to day, their family, the trip they take, the gift they receive, what what they eat, if they are fat or thin and even if they should have children or not. While some influencers say it’s part of the job and they handle it ‘fine’, many others have had to go to therapy to cope.