Conchita's unusual confession after the end of 'Deluxe': "There is a lot of hypocrisy and people who are not what they seem"

If there is a name especially related to the Deluxe version of Sálvame since its inception, that is Conchita Pérez.

Oliver Thansan
Oliver Thansan
23 July 2023 Sunday 23:14
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Conchita's unusual confession after the end of 'Deluxe': "There is a lot of hypocrisy and people who are not what they seem"

If there is a name especially related to the Deluxe version of Sálvame since its inception, that is Conchita Pérez. The well-known polygraphist has been linked to the La fabrica de tele program for most of her time on Telecinco, although she, unlike the rest of her collaborators, is not afraid of her work.

The manager of the Polideluxe combined her work in the television space with her work in an office in Madrid, where anyone can submit to the so-called 'truth machine' for just under 400 euros. After the cancellation of the program in which she has appeared since 2010, Conchita has opened up about what Deluxe has meant for her in an interview for the newspaper El País.

"I am very happy and very grateful," she begins by recounting. "TV has been a great extra, but it is not my main job, which I have never left," specifies the polygraphist, who claims to receive clients "in Zaragoza and Madrid" currently.

Despite the expressions of gratitude, Conchita has also had somewhat harsher words towards what has been her television home for all this time. "They have been very good years, although there have also been disappointments. There is a lot of hypocrisy and people who are not what they seem," she confesses, later adding that at no time did she "gang with the collaborators."

Conchita Pérez has made a detailed assessment of all her experience in front of the most famous polygraph on television. During the 13 years that she has collaborated with the Deluxe, she claims to have met all kinds of guests, including those who did not quite take the 'truth machine' seriously.

"Those who come in sin usually give themselves away. They believe that it does not work or that it is a game and that they are going to win, and it is not," Conchita stated in an interview with El País. In addition, he has recounted what his previous job was and what was found in it: "Before becoming a polygraphist, I ran a roadside hotel next to a gas station. I saw everything there. Drug-addicted truckers, corrupt businessmen, etc. ", he assured.