SuperXclusivo

SuperXclusivo (also known as La Comay) is a Puerto Rican gossip/news show broadcast on Mega TV Puerto Rico. The show, originally premiered on WAPA-TV as SuperXclusivo on January 24, 2000. It is hosted by puppet gossiper La Comay The Gossiper[1] (created, voiced and puppeteered by Kobbo Santarrosa), originally alongside co-host and sidekick Héctor Travieso and, currently, alongside Roque Gallart. La Comay presents gossip about celebrities and political figures, as well as news and social commentary on local issues. Through its original run, SuperXclusivo maintained the top position in local ratings.[2] The show ended its original run on WAPA-TV on January 9, 2013, after Kobbo Santarrosa resigned from the network.

SuperXclusivo
New title card for La Comay
Also known asX-clusivo (1995–1999)
SuperXclusivo (2000–2013)'
GenreLive-action
Created byKobbo Santarrosa
Based onLa Cháchara
La Condesa del Bochinche
Directed byRiquin Sánchez (2000–2007)
Maximiliano Paglia (2007–2013)
Dagmarie Berríos (2019–present)
StarringLa Comay
Héctor Travieso
Roque Gallart
Opening theme"La Comay Theme"
Ending theme"La Comay Theme (instrumental)"
Country of originPuerto Rico
Original language(s)Spanish
No. of seasons13 (SuperXclusivo)
2 (
La Comay)
Production
Executive producer(s)Kobbo Santarrosa
Camera setupMulti-camera
Running time65 minutes (including commercials)
DistributorWKAQ-TV (1995–1999)
WAPA-TV (2000–2013)
WTCV (2019–present)
Release
Original networkTelemundo (1995–1999)
WAPA (2000–2013)
Mega TV (2019–present)
Original releaseJanuary 24, 2000 (2000-01-24) 
present
Chronology
Related showsLo Sé Todo (WAPA)
Dando Candela (Telemundo)
Ahora Es
(Univisión)
Punto Final con Carmén Jovet
(ABC5)
External links
Website

On December 19, 2018, it was confirmed that La Comay would be returning to television to Mega TV after years of speculation.[3] The new show, titled after the puppet gossiper, premiered on January 28, 2019.

History

1995–1999: Origins in Telemundo

Before SuperXclusivo, Kobbo Santarrosa had created two characters, La Cháchara ("The Tittle-Tattler") and La Condesa del Bochinche ("The Gossip Countess") which were featured on various gossip and entertainment news shows in . He created La Comay in 1995, featuring her first segments in El Show de las 12 on Telemundo, and then on its own show called X-clusivo. At the time, Santarrosa was accompanied by host Eddie Miró. Santarrosa left Telemundo in 1999.

2000–2013: Longtime run on WAPA-TV

Santarrosa joined WAPA-TV where he took La Comay to her new gossip program, creating SuperXclusivo, accompanied by Cuban actor/comedian Héctor Travieso as co-host and journalist Leo Fernández III as field reporter, who would later leave the show. During the 13 years that SuperXclusivo aired, it was the most watched television show in Puerto Rico, according to local ratings.[4][5][6][7]

In the original show's later years, many politicians and high-profile figures attended the show for interviews, including governors Aníbal Acevedo Vilá, Luis Fortuño and Alejandro García Padilla during each of their incumbencies.[8][9]

In its final years in WAPA-TV, the show closely followed the investigation and accusations in the murder of Lorenzo González Cacho, an 8-year-old boy murdered on March 9, 2010. SuperXclusivo conducted their own investigations throughout the murder's course and came to conclusions that exposed irregularities in the investigations, which differed from official evidence and investigations presented in court. Among those, was the crime scene, which was not secured and was cleaned after investigators recorded their findings, before forensics could thoroughly analyze it.[10]

2014–2015: Rumors of return

Long after Santarrosa's resignation from WAPA-TV in 2013, several rumors arose on multiple occasions about a possible return of La Comay to television. Most rumors indicated that she would make her comeback on Mega TV;[11] other rumors claimed that her return would be on Univision Puerto Rico.[12][13] In November 2014, Héctor Travieso publicly said that La Comay would return in 2015 with Santarrosa and him at the helm, though it was never specified which network or platform the return would take place.[14] In an article published in February 2015, rumors of the return of La Comay again surfaced of a comeback on Mega TV.[15]

2018–present: Reappearance and return to television

On October 9, 2018, both La Comay and Héctor Travieso reappeared in online media and television (including the airwaves of WAPA-TV, where SuperXclusivo originally aired) to announce a 2019 concert date for Bad Bunny in Puerto Rico, marking their first television and media appearance since SuperXclusivo was cancelled in 2013 and further fueling longtime rumors of a comeback. The concert announcement was filmed in a full recreation of the set of SuperXclusivo. On the reason why he chose to "revive" La Comay, the singer commented the show was "very present in the popular culture of Puerto Rico" as well as it was part of his family and his childhood in the early decade of 2000, "everybody grew up watching La Comay";[16] this reappearance led to continue speculations of a return to TV, which Santarrossa stated, in November 2018, the idea was not discarded.[17]

After years of speculation, it was confirmed that La Comay would be returning to television to Mega TV in a show titled after Kobbo's character. Sylvia Hernández, who previously worked in SuperXclusivo, returned as a field reporter on the new show after leaving other gossip/analysis shows. In March 2019, it was reported that La Comay would be extended to audiences in Florida.[18] On March 29, 2019, Héctor Travieso announced his resignation from the show due to personal life purposes and was replaced shortly by Roque Gallart in April 2019 as co-host and sidekick.

COVID-19 pandemic

On March 30, 2020 Due to the COVID-19 pandemic the manager of La Comay, Kobbo Santarrosa decided to suspend the program until further notice for the good of the manager and his employees. This was caused by an employee of the SBS Company (MEGA TV) testing positive for the Coronavirus.

La Comay, the character

La Comay, the character, is a life-sized puppet created and puppeteered by Antulio "Kobbo" Santarrossa, a professional ventriloquist. La Comay is meant to represent a society matron who recounts rumors, gossip, and comments on social and political news. She was joined by Cuban soap opera actor Héctor Travieso by her side until March 2019; radio personality and public figure Roque Gallart replaced Travieso as of April 2019. On December 13, 2012, La Comay was interviewed by Wyatt Cenac in his final story for The Daily Show with Jon Stewart.

Boycott and cancellation

On December 4, 2012, Santarrosa, through his puppeteering of La Comay, commented on the allegations that the recent murder of a local public relations agent was related to a promiscuous homosexual lifestyle.[19] The comments sparked a backlash, particularly on social media, and started a movement to boycott the show[20] led by LGBT activist Pedro Julio Serrano. The movement crowd-sourced requests for sponsors to drop support for the show, and within a week, sixteen sponsors had removed their commercials from the show's timeslot, including dental hygiene products, telecommunication companies, health care providers and supermarket chains.[21][22][23]

On January 8, 2013, after being asked to pre-record the show rather than present it live, Santarrosa abruptly left WAPA-TV approximately an hour before the show was slated to air; the episode that aired that day was a re-run of the previous day. The next day, January 9, 2013, Santarrosa presented his resignation in person at WAPA-TV, and the regularly-scheduled program was substituted by a movie; later that night, the TV station confirmed Santarrosa's resignation.[24]

Aftermath

February 2013: Timeslot replacement

In February 2013, Santarrosa's timeslot in WAPA-TV was replaced by a new live gossip show titled Lo Sé Todo (I Know It All) starring Frankie Jay, Roque Gallart, Sylvia Hernández, Jessica Serrano, and radio producer, Carlos "Topy" Mamery. Jay, Serrano and Hernández, who previously worked as field reporters for Santarrosa in the final years of SuperXclusivo's run, continued their work as field reporters on Lo Sé Todo[25][26][27] until Gallart, Serrano and Hernández eventually left the program, the latter two for Dando Candela, the show's main competitor; Mamery died in December 2014. Gossip journalist Pedro Juan Figueroa joined the show in March, after leaving Dando Candela,[28][29] which led to improved ratings.[30] He left the program, months after a hiatus during the aftermath of Hurricane Maria's impact in Puerto Rico and returned months later.

January 2014: Travieso's transition to Dando Candela

Over a year after the cancellation of SuperXclusivo, Héctor Travieso accepted a contract Dando Candela on Telemundo.[31][32] Travieso reportedly called Santarrosa before accepting, and Santarrosa encouraged him to take the position.[33] Travieso joined Dando Candela in January 2014; however, he quit in May, after less than four months at the show.[34] Rumors stated that Travieso's resignation was related to management concerns about a possible return to TV with Santarrosa.[35][36]

September 2014: La Comay: Aparente y Alegadamente

In September 2014, Manolo Travieso-Hurst, son of Héctor Travieso, announced the release of a documentary he was co-producing based on La Comay. The documentary, La Comay: Aparente y Alegadamente, had a theatrical release in November 2014 and was told via interviews conducted by former Univision reporter Liza Lugo, a constant target of La Comay. Among those interviewed, included public figures who were either involved or affected by La Comay, such as journalist Carmen Jovet, analyst Rubén Sánchez, former mayor of San Juan Jorge Santini, radio host Jorge Seijo, LGBT activist Pedro Julio Serrano, and others. Kobbo Santarosa himself was also interviewed in his home in Orlando.[37][38]

References

  1. "Comadre". Comadre (Sustantiativo femenino: "mujer que chusmea...Las comadres se juntaban en la puerta para intercambiar chismes.") Accessed 30 October 2019.
  2. "Audiencias del martes". Primera Hora. September 5, 2012.
  3. "Regresa "La Comay" a través de Mega TV". Primera Hora. December 19, 2018.
  4. Santana, Glenn (March 5, 2010). "Ratings: Mediafax sigue vivo". Primera Hora.
  5. Santana, Glenn (September 3, 2010). "Sigue dando candela SuperXclusivo". Primera Hora.
  6. Santana, Glenn (June 17, 2012). "Los 30 programas más vistos". Primera Hora.
  7. "Períodico local felicita a SuperXclusivo". WAPA-TV. July 5, 2012.
  8. "Aníbal Acevedo Vilá: No y No". WAPA-TV.
  9. "Luis Fortuño: Vota Si y Si". WAPA-TV.
  10. Berríos, Nelson G. (January 29, 2017). "Lo que se sabe de la muerte del niño Lorenzo". Primera Hora. Retrieved January 30, 2014.
  11. "Primicia Exclusiva: La Comay regresa a la televisión y les digo donde y cuando!". secretosdeimpacto.com. Archived from the original on 2014-01-01.
  12. Local, Univision. "KQ 105". Univision.
  13. "- Telemundo 44 Washington DC". Telemundo 44 Washington DC.
  14. ""La Comay vuelve en el 2015" - Primera Hora.com". elvocero.com. Archived from the original on 2014-11-26.
  15. "¿Regresa La Comay? - El Vocero.com". elvocero.com. Archived from the original on 2015-02-04.
  16. Fullana Acosta, Mariela (9 October 2018). "Bad Bunny revive a "La Comay"". elnuevodia.com.
  17. "Kobbo Santarrosa no descarta el regreso La Comay". metro.pr. 12 December 2018.
  18. Montalvo, Víctor Torres. "La Comay estrena nuevo horario". Metro (in Spanish).
  19. Berríos, Nelson G. (December 7, 2012). "El Quinto Poder vs. La Comay". El Nuevo Día. Archived from the original on January 11, 2013.
  20. Voxxi (7 December 2012). "Boycott Against 'La Comay': Puerto Rico's Social Media Movement Scores Important Victory". Retrieved 16 August 2018 via Huff Post.
  21. Rosario, Frances (December 5, 2012). "Retiran auspicios a SuperXclusivo ante boicot de pueblo". Primera Hora.
  22. "Walmart cancela anuncios en SuperXclusivo". Primera Hora. December 6, 2012.
  23. "Kia y Sprint dejan de pautar anuncios en SuperXclusivo". Primera Hora. December 14, 2012.
  24. Vargas, Patricia (January 9, 2012). "Kobbo se fue de WAPA". El Nuevo Día.
  25. "Lo sé todo: tiene mucho que aprender". primerahora.com. 12 February 2013.
  26. Ramos, Zuania (11 February 2013). "WAPA TV's New Gossip Show 'Lo Sé Todo' To Replace La Comay's 'SuperXclusivo'" via Huff Post.
  27. "Puerto Rico's WAPA Network Debuts 'SuperXclusivo' Replacement - Fushion.net". fusion.net. Archived from the original on 2014-01-10.
  28. "(none)". (none).
  29. "Pedro Juan Figueroa deja "Dando Candela" y da el salto a "Lo sé todo"". primerahora.com. 10 March 2013.
  30. "Pedro Juan Figueroa mueve a las televidentes a "Lo sé todo"". primerahora.com. 12 March 2013.
  31. "Héctor Travieso se une a Dando Candela". primerahora.com. 7 January 2014.
  32. "Héctor Travieso se une a "Dando Candela"". El Nuevo Dia.
  33. "Travieso llamó a Kobbo antes de dar el salto a Dando Candela". Metro.
  34. "Renuncia Héctor Travieso a "Dando Candela"". elnuevodia.com. 3 May 2014.
  35. "Héctor Travieso asegura que hubo resistencia a él en Dando Candela". primerahora.com. 5 May 2014.
  36. "Héctor Travieso renuncia a Dando Candela - El Vocero.com". elvocero.com. Archived from the original on 2014-08-06.
  37. "La Comay resurgirá en noviembre". Metro.
  38. López, Rita Portela (23 September 2014). "'La Comay' llegará al cine". noticel.com.
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