Florinda Meza decided not to remain silent after a video went viral in which a young man claimed to be the son of the late actor Roberto Gómez Bolaños, “Chespirito”. The user, who indicates that his name is José María Gómez, recorded himself in a video that went viral on TikTok in which he states that he was born in 2002, the result of the relationship of his mother, a masseuse, with Roberto Gómez Bolaños. Hours after causing a stir with his supposed revelation, he released a video declaring it was a lie.
In the first video in which he claimed to be the son of the writer and comedian, he explained that the actor gave him his last name and kept it until his death in 2014 and that Florinda Meza was aware of this situation, who allegedly stopped giving him money after the actor left: “And I understand, it’s okay, at the end of the day the man cheated on her,” he said.
Florinda Meza is ready to sue Chespirito’s son over his bio series
Will Florinda Meza sue Quico for saying they had a relationship?
Do you remember the episode in which “Don Ramón” returned to the “El Chavo del 8” neighborhood?
Florinda Meza denies having a million-dollar fortune after Chespirito’s death
In the visual clip, the young man added that he is not interested in doing comedy like his father, although this humor lives in him, he only left his video version so that the public could know about its existence just like Florinda: “Just expose yourself, and before Ms. Florinda dies, let her know who I am,” he says at the end of the video, in which he says goodbye with a wink.
Through a message on social networks, the actress Florinda Meza denied the veracity of this young man’s statements, pointing out that he had already undergone a vasectomy before she and Roberto Gómez were together, which is why they did not have children.
“A clarification to the millions who played against a man claiming to be Roberto’s son: Roberto had a vasectomy before he and I were together. It is a public and known fact why he and I did not have children.”
Meza reiterated that this clarification is not directed at the person who spread this insult, since he has retracted his information, but at the public: “The clarification is not directed at the person who spread this insult because he knows that it is a lie.” He later recognized it in another video, but when he saw the success of his “performance,” he decided to make millions of people believe it. The education is for the public.”
Exactly a day after the video went viral, the young man posted another on TikTok in which he posed for the camera and added the text: “I’m spreading false information on the internet.” Finally, on August 30, he uploaded another clip up on the same social network where he made it clear that it was all a joke and mocked users by making them believe that it would be part of the bioseries prepared by Roberto Gómez Bolaños. “Hahaha, that’s not true. “Troll,” he wrote at the end of the video in which he appeared dancing.