00:00in Buen Andeo en Compañía.
00:01Why do you think people remember this show so much?
00:05It's been a while, but it's always on the back burner.
00:08And particularly your participation.
00:10It's the time. I think, look,
00:13at the time there were no social media,
00:16there was no internet, let's say.
00:17We're talking about me, I did, do you remember?
00:20Who were you when you were young?
00:21No, I do remember.
00:22Who were you at the time?
00:24You were a kid. How old are you?
00:26Sorry for the question.
00:2736.
00:28I'm 55.
00:30So I used to go to the house and say,
00:32how did it go?
00:33No, well, we scored 67 points.
00:35No, but a lot.
00:3867.
00:39I mean, like, I don't know, like happening with Japan
00:41in its best time.
00:42Happening with Japan every 100.
00:43We were 67 at that time.
00:4567 points, I was seeing all of Chile.
00:48Exactly.
00:49The egg of the...
00:50And here we are at home, I don't know,
00:52in an abandoned country.
00:53Were you aware of that level of impact
00:56in the streets?
00:57Did people stop you?
00:59To this day.
01:00Look, what surprises me the most now
01:02is that kids notice me.
01:04I used to say, all of a sudden,
01:06all of a sudden, a kid comes up to me and asks for a picture.
01:08Then I say, why?
01:10Of course, because technology got old on me,
01:13but I'm still doing TikTok,
01:16I do Instagram, and now I came up with the idea of doing a podcast.
01:19So, well, we'll talk about the system in a little while.
01:21But Morandego & Compañía was for a lot of people.
01:27I mean, I feel the respect of the people.
01:30People appreciate the idea of making us laugh.
01:38I mean, thanks for the good times.
01:41Thanks for...
01:43It gives you grace, man.
01:44So, I think that in Chile,
01:48people were grateful for...
01:51For those spaces, right?
01:52For those spaces.
01:53And it gives you grace, and they tell you,
01:55well, it happens that people get excited, man.
02:00They get excited with you?
02:01Of course, they start crying.
02:02I don't know, I'm not that ugly.
02:03No, don't say that.
02:05No.
02:06Oh, no!
02:08No, they get excited because, of course...
02:10To get to know you.
02:11They say, one day I'm going to meet you.
02:12And, of course, they catch you, I don't know,
02:14you're on the street, or you're in a market, I don't know.
02:17Actually, I forget that I'm a celebrity.
02:19So, suddenly, someone comes and gets excited.
02:22It's like...
02:23It happens to Professor Rosa, Mr. Carter,
02:24I haven't talked to them.
02:26I've been traveling with Professor Rosa,
02:28we go to the airport,
02:29and a woman comes, I don't know, 40 years old,
02:33and she sees Professor Rosa, and she gets excited,
02:34and she starts crying,
02:35because the strong child-like feeling comes to her.
02:37And it's a very special phenomenon.
02:42I imagine it's shocking to realize
02:43the excitement that the rest of the public generates.
02:46There's a whole generation
02:48that saw Morandeo as a companion,
02:50but, more than anything, on my side, it's the humor.
02:53The humor.
02:54There were very beautiful, iconic women,
02:56until today, who continue to work on television
02:58and do things.
03:00And there's a whole bunch of characters
03:02that, until today, appear on television,
03:04and continue to work.
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