Yusan Acha, a friend of María Teresa Campos, was on the set of Así es la vida on Wednesday, June 28. He was the director of the Telecinco program that the journalist presented during the weekends between 2009 and 2017, What a happy time! In this format it was possible to see the last television interview of Carmen Sevilla.

The chain’s new afternoon show showed unpublished images of the meeting between the two professionals in 2011 and paid tribute to the actress, who had died the day before. The guest explained how that interview had been: “Carmen was fine, she had lost faculties, but she was Carmen. She knew what she wanted to tell, but she already had the beginning of things.

Acha, who is still in contact with Carmen Borrego’s mother and is going to visit her at home, highlighted what the veteran presenter misses: “More than TV, it’s the people. She went out into the street and they didn’t let her give a step. Those people who gave him life are what he has missed the most in recent months, not being able to go out”.

Sandra Barneda asked her: “How is Teresa?” He spoke about her state of health: “She’s fine, she’s at her house, she’s calm.” He pointed out that he did not want to share a lot of information to respect her daughters.

“I am lucky to be able to go see her. She is happy at times. She watches TV very little. She is fine, calm, at home, away from everything. She lives what she has had to live. She has significant cognitive deterioration, that Terelu has said it, and lives day by day,” he declared.

Yusan Acha posted a message on Instagram on Friday, June 30, two days after his visit to Así es la vida, to share something that had been left unanswered: “On Wednesday, due to the emotion of the day, the memories of Carmen, the tribute that I wanted to pay him and the situation, I did not express something that I had been thinking since the colleagues called me. I went because I was among friends and because María Teresa could not do it”.

The director wrote: “I would like to highlight, above all else, that this and other interviews in the channel archive are important today because of what is told and how it is told thanks to the fact that they are carried out by a journalist, María Teresa Campos, who is living history of television”.

According to the criteria of The Trust Project