‘Ni que fueramos shhh’ has its continuity assured on the Quickie Channel and on TEN TV. The program presented by María Patiño will go on vacation next Wednesday, July 24, but will return to the DTT channel after has been renewed for a second seasonas revealed by El País.

After several weeks of summer break, according to the aforementioned media, the space produced by Fabricantes Studio will return, in principle, on September 2ndcoinciding with the start of the new television season.

“Fortunately, in September we will return in somewhat better circumstances and, if we achieve self-financing, will completely change the horizon of the program“It won’t be a blockbuster, but we have understood that budget is not the most important thing when it comes to telling engaging stories,” Cornejo said in a statement to El País.

The adventure of ‘Ni que fueramos shhh’ began on May 15 on YouTube and Twitch, reaching conventional television on June 3 through the broadcast of TEN TV, although it also has as a broadcast partner two local channels from Cantabria and the Canary Islands.

With the format that rescues the essence of ‘Sálvame’, the channel once again opted for daily live television after several attempts at its beginnings in DTT. In March 2017, TEN TV launched ‘#TENdencia’, a daily programme presented by Vicky Martín BerrocalThe show had a very short run, as it only lasted two months on the air.

This is not the first time that TEN TV has dared to make a strong commitment to entertainment television from its small window on DTT. For a few years now, the channel has been making a strong commitment to entertainment television from its small window on DTT. a place among Eurofans for its digital coverage of Eurovision and for broadcasting some of the preselections from some of the countries participating in the Festival.

In addition to trying to acquire the rights to the Swedish Melodifestivalen, one of the most important Eurovision preselections within the festival sphere, since 2022, the channel has broadcast several editions of Finland’s ‘UMK’, Estonia’s ‘Eesti Laul’ and Belgium’s ‘Eurosong’.