How to make someone who has never seen When leaving class understand how disappointing the reunion program of
When leaving class
has been in
Martínez y Hermanos
(broadcast on YouTube) on the occasion of the twenty years since the end of a series that is not pride of anyone's career, but it was the beginning of the careers of many.
Twenty-five minutes a day (in Telecinco programming, one hour) that despite being a delirium from the beginning, managed to captivate Spain thanks to a cast of young and beautiful faces (beautiful by the standards of the nineties), bizarre plots sprinkled with problems youthful, and a "street" language that was a real nonsense.
Obviously neither Pataki nor Morales nor Sobera were among the half dozen actors in the cast who had nothing better to do that afternoon.
Not even Mariano Alameda (currently a transpersonal therapist, that is to say, morning singers) could (or wanted) to spend more than on video.
The most humble blog on the Net can offer you more information about the actors than this eleven-minute special, and in Fernando Andina's restaurant on any silly day more veterans of the series gather than in this special.
The fate of the actors in the series has been disparate and often unfair.
When he leaves class he has a documentary, and not necessarily a nostalgic one.
Only by finding the whereabouts of Luis Montes (Sócrates) would there be material.
I find Dani Martínez very nice, but he has ripped me off.
I will revenge.
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