Frowning: Botox and entertainment | Television

Ana Rosa Quintana brought a facial expression expert to her program this Thursday to analyze the gestures of Álvaro García Ortiz, Attorney General of the State, during the trial he is undergoing at the Supreme Court. During the block, Quintana talks about the two hemispheres of the brain, the emotional one and the rational one, and this leads the expert, standing next to the screen, to tell us that thanks to a mesh that he placed on the prosecutor’s face, it allows him to know “if he moves his lips, tightens them and frowns”. If you frown, in addition to being an indicator that that area requires botulinum toxin, it also means that you are guilty, who knows, let’s give way to our analysts at the table.

This article emphasized the ways of moral superiority. Where we end up, it can’t be this, frivolity that doesn’t soak everything up, these serious topics deserve solemnity, things like that. But then I looked back, and I remembered that first time someone talked down to me about save of politics and journalism, and seeing as many others came later, I decided to change my mind.

Quintana brings an expert in facial gesticulation because he knows that this too matters and is entertaining, because it has been talked about fervently for days and because no one stays in front of the screen if in mid-morning people talk about “anonymizing”, a terrible verb as much as the RAE admits it.

You won’t explain how television works to her, who has called some graphologists to analyze the handwriting of some protagonists in the Events section and perhaps it would be useful for some of them to know if the signature of the man they are judging indicates that he has a volcanic attitude. How would I save Anne Germain if I could find out if anyone from the world of the dead proves that García Ortiz leaked the email everyone is talking about.

The one from Usera knows Latin, like those from save me when they took Cristina Soria and she told us what the faces and bodies of the interviewees said, or when we anxiously awaited Conchita’s verdict after the polygraph interrogation. It’s okay, it’s entertainment. Anyone who has tried it knows it.

Or it could be that when you set a goal you do very strange things.