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QUIQUE PEINADO: HIS AGE, HIS CHILDREN AND BIOGRAPHY OF THE COLLABORATOR OF ‘ZAPEANDO’

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Born in Madrid in 1979, he has worked in a multitude of media outlets, always writing on topics related to sport and especially basketball, his great passion.

He has collaborated in Gigantes magazine, like Juanma López Iturriaga , and he has been the first Spaniard to write for the prestigious North American publication Slam.

But his extensive career does not end there, because he has also worked for Eurosport, Esquire and Líbero magazines. Radio has been the medium where he has worked the most, participating in ‘Yu, Don’t miss anything’, ‘The best thing that can happen to you’, ‘Live it’s two days’, EuroPlay and ‘Asuntos propias’.

He currently presents the podcast ‘Buenísimo bien’ on the SER network, in which he works with his inseparable Manuel Burque , with whom he formed an unforgettable couple on ‘Radio Gaga’, on Movistar+.

Although, without a doubt, his popularity has come from television, where he has worked as a scriptwriter on a large number of programs. In 2013 he had the opportunity to jump before the cameras in ‘Zapeando’, giving great results in the revolution that made the laSexta program settle on the grid.

In the laSexta program he coincides with other colleagues such as Dani Mateo, Valeria Ros,  Lorena Castell ,  María Gómez,  Cristina Pedroche ,  Marta Torné,  Josie , Miki Nadal , Boticaria García or Isabel Forner .

QUIQUE PEINADO’S PARTNER

The journalist is very jealous of his private life, as he told in an interview for María Sánchez Rubio : «You never know what can happen or who can react. I am on Twitter so much, and I see how the buzzing crowd is, you say, hell, wait.

Although his partner never appears in his publications, as a good father he cannot avoid showing off his children, even if it is protecting their faces in front of his followers.

Mikel and Héctor are also the protagonists of many of the anecdotes that Quique tells in his programs, as is Berto Romero, because he believes that they are too good to let them get lost.

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