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The crux of the matter is to put limits on humor. Or rather, who decides to wear them? Can we laugh at everyone and everything? When the grace, the joke or the parody falls into disrespect, a good melon opens, as has happened with a sketch about the celebration of Andalusian Holy Week in the TV3 program Està passant. Here is a small sample of what was seen in the space of the executing arm of the Generalitat of Catalonia.

"I've been 200 years without being able to throw a dust as God commands because while I take off my dress they have already taken away my desire," said actress Judit Martín dressed in iconography of the also known as the White Dove. There were more pearls: "I'm hotter than a churrero's stick," she continued to say while cradling a doll symbolizing the baby Jesus.

At his side he laughed at Toni Soler (57), one of the most important comedians of the Catalan circuit who, in addition to being a presenter, is also a director with Jaume Buixó. And, above all, he is the founder of Minoria Absoluta, the production company created in 2006 that provides content to public television in Catalonia, Poland being one of the most recognized for its satires on politicians and various Bourbons. It should be noted that a few weeks before the state of alarm, the National Institute of Statistics (INE) revealed that of the almost 1.4 million Andalusians living outside their community, 570,000 resided in Catalonia, which is still the largest geographical area.

In the wake of this scandal, the Junta de Andalucía has demanded that they apologize. Among others, the bishoprics of Huelva have also joined; the website of the Federation of Andalusian Cultural Entities in Catalonia (FECAC) reports that the president has already sent a letter to the Consell de l'Audiovisual de Cataluña (CAC) to respect and restore the honor of the Virgen del Rocío who rests in Almonte (Huelva); Valents, the political group created by Manuel Valls – former prime minister of the French Republic married to millionaire Susana Gallardo, of the Almirall laboratories – has filed a formal complaint with the CAC to ask that the program be canceled and hundreds of Internet users ask for the withdrawal of sponsors, especially Borges and Haribo.

Toni Soler's chulesque response has been blunt on Twitter: "You can wait sitting down." "And who is he?", as José Luis Perales (78) would say. He is the son of the poet and defender of Catalan Carme Guasch and brother of the journalist and writer Sílvia Soler (61), who works like the protagonist of this news in media related to independence such as the newspaper Ara and Catalunya Radio. However, the pela is the peel, and the author does not disgust him when he receives the relevant emoluments of his work translated into Spanish, Italian and even Japanese. Both were born in Figueras (Girona) and have been fatherless since adolescence.

In addition to being a communicator, Toni Soler obtained his degree in History from the University of Barcelona. He has always been fascinated by Nazism and the Holocaust and on occasion he has confessed that he suffers from chronophobia, (irrational fear of time or the passage of time), hence it makes sense for him to have studied that career. That dread of the passage of time he lived fully when he turned 50, where he was submerged in a deep crisis that led him to wonder where he was going and, above all, if he had made good use of the time.

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That passing of the years has been like a roller coaster. When he published the book Un bon cel he recorded what he thought when he was young: "I will commit suicide at thirty-something." In an interview with the newspaper Ara, of which he was one of the founders, he explained that "the instinct to stay alive increases with age. When I said I wanted to commit suicide, it was because, in reality, I didn't know what death was. I wondered if I was the kind of person I believed or wanted to be. I think I could have had more fun, even though I'm happy with what I've done."

His important flirtations with the media were with Andreu Buenafuente (58) in his production company El Terrat in the mid-nineties and, from there, he began to fly alone. Ufano showed himself by winning recognized Spanish national awards such as the three Waves, the National Communication Award and the Television Academy Award. In his eagerness to independence he suffered the investigation of the Treasury because he allegedly received payments from the Procés.

He is married to Laura Gas and has two children, Laura (21) and Martí (19), with whom he lives in a spacious apartment in Barcelona's Gothic Quarter. There he has found stability after spending many years in his hometown and in Badalona. The little time he has left is dedicated to being with his family or getting lost in the ancient streets of his neighborhood with his dog Xica. Sometimes she has children on social media, like when Laura turned 20 and sometimes she remembers the black and white past when Martí was a teenager.

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