The wedding of Tamara Falcó and Íñigo Onieva is 'so twentieth century', but principled. Except for the scarf test to verify the virginity of the bride, the previous marriage is giving us all the ingredients of a story of love affairs 'the old way', with adaptations 2.0, in which the protagonists play their roles with absolute naturalness before a 'delivered' audience that observes them with a mixture of fascination, morbid curiosity and embarrassment.

The facts are there for everyone to draw their own conclusions. While the very excited bride has been planning since April the shadow of fertility treatments and slimming cures, the groom lives delivered to the maelstrom of a bachelor party that knows no spatial / temporal limits.

The thing is like this. Tamara secludes herself in Buchinger Clinic (Marbella) to, she says, purify herself (not to lose weight), based on a therapeutic fast consisting of ingesting just 250 calories a day in the form of infusions, broths and water without maintaining hardly any contact with the outside, without mobile, or social networks. And Íñigo, who has just celebrated his 34th birthday without his girlfriend (because she is in seclusion) after his arrival from San Sebastian (or something like that I read out there), is ready to enjoy it the greatest with his colleagues during a tour of Argentina that will take him to visit Bariloche and Mar de Plata and then jump the pond again and close the party in Budapest. That yes with the only condition, apparently, that there is no female presence in the saraos. And, because there was some doubt about it, there is no evidence that either of them has been 'forced' to organize their 'pre-wedding' agenda in this way. In other words, they do it that way because they feel like it (Tamara, too).

That is, while the bride feeds on broths, undergoes radiofrequency sessions, exercises and meditates, isolating herself from the mundane noise by his own decision, the groom takes a bath of crowds and gorges himself on Argentine emptiness beyond the seas because he is worth it. That said, all 'so twentieth century' ... or XIX?

  • Tamara Falcó
  • Argentina
  • Beaches
  • HBPR

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