Ana Rosa has been on air for more than 17 seasons, shaping a morning television benchmark in recent years. Amid fierce competition, especially after Antena 3 joined forces with popular formats like Espejo Público, the Ana Rosa Quintana program stood out with its mix of political news, celebrity gossip, live events, exclusive stories, and interviews that kept viewers engaged.
The show began on Telecinco in the morning lineup, aligning with the departure of María Teresa Campos from the main Atresmedia network. This shift drew listeners toward the Telecinco format, which quickly gained strong ratings and solidified its place in daytime television.
Ana Obregón’s wish to visit Pablo Motos’ El Hormiguero: “We invited him and he said yes”
Media outlets reported that the program explored the content Ana Obregón had written before her death for an upcoming book, including notes that continued a project Aless wanted to pursue in the future.
On the set, Marisa Martín-Blázquez discussed the information she had, stating that the material was not a finished manuscript but more like a diary with segments disconnected from Aless’s life at the time. She added that only a few pages existed, and they did not match the extent Ana Obregón described.
She explained that, with the help of an editor, Obregón began drafting what Aless might have included in the book, noting that the knowledge she possessed differed from Ana Obregón’s own account.
Lequio comments on pages written by his son
While colleagues on set discussed Aless’s writings, Joaquín Prat asked Lequio directly about the book. The Italian responded that he knew the pages his son had written and that there were about twenty pages, all well written.
Regarding the content, Lequio described the reflections as pleasant but declined to reveal more, saying he did not know the rest. Ana Rosa then asked whether the material represented a seed for a book or a newspaper project. Lequio replied that it could indeed be the seed of a book.
When pressed about the remainder of the pages, Aless acknowledged he did not know anything about those additional sections. He concluded by noting that his son Aless was a well-read man who loved writing and thought deeply about what he read.