Loading AI tools
Spanish television program From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Cada día (Each Day) was a Spanish television program broadcast on Antena 3. It was presented by María Teresa Campos, who co-directed it with her daughter Carmen Borrego.[1]
Cada día | |
---|---|
Genre | Magazine |
Directed by |
|
Presented by | María Teresa Campos |
Music by | Federico Vaona |
Country of origin | Spain |
Original language | Spanish |
No. of seasons | 2 |
No. of episodes | 260 |
Production | |
Running time | 180 minutes |
Production company | Europroducciones |
Original release | |
Network | Antena 3 |
Release | 9 September 2004 – 22 December 2005 |
Related | |
|
After María Teresa Campos had spent eight seasons on Spain's most-watched morning magazine, Telecinco's Día a día , in May 2004 the rival network Antena 3 announced it had signed her to host a similar show in the same time slot.[2] Cada día premiered on 9 September 2004, four days ahead of schedule due to the high ratings that Día a día, now presented by Carolina Ferre, was receiving.[3]
The program followed the typical magazine format, combining interviews, news review, gossip, contests, tertulias, fashion, cooking, political debate, etc.[4]
Cada día's contributors included Bertín Osborne (Defensor del famoso, leaving the program after just one month),[5] Jaime Peñafiel , Terelu Campos, Coto Matamoros, Rocío Carrasco, Paco Valladares (in a cooking segment),[6] María Eugenia Yagüe, Paloma Gómez Borrero, Rosa Villacastín , Cristina Tàrrega, Jimmy Giménez-Arnau, Carlos Ferrando , Jesús Mariñas, Miguel Ángel Almodóvar , Ketty Kaufmann , Josemi Rodríguez-Sieiro , Luis Rollán , Miguel Temprano, and Ángel Antonio Herrera.[4]
The political debate panel had members such as María Antonia Iglesias, Curri Valenzuela, José Oneto , Luis Herrero, Javier Nart, Isabel San Sebastián, Enric Sopena, Consuelo Álvarez de Toledo , Ignacio Camacho , Antonio Casado , Amalia Sánchez Sampedro , and Carmen Rigalt.
In its second season, which began on 5 September 2005, Arancha de Benito joined the show.[7]
Viewership did not meet the network's expectations. The first season ended with a ratings share of 19%, and in the second the program stood at a 17% share, almost 8 points less than its rival El programa de Ana Rosa on Telecinco and 5 less than Por la mañana on TVE. This led to its definitive cancellation at the end of 2005.[8]
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Every time you click a link to Wikipedia, Wiktionary or Wikiquote in your browser's search results, it will show the modern Wikiwand interface.
Wikiwand extension is a five stars, simple, with minimum permission required to keep your browsing private, safe and transparent.