Mom Says Reporter Died Holding Hands With Daughter

Mom Says Reporter Died Holding Hands With Daughter

After Susana Naspoli, who died of pelvic cancer, her mother Dona Maria said the journalist died holding hands with her 16yearold daughter Julia.

“She was very stunned, very excited. Lost because she was walking her mum to bed. She was lying next to her mum in the hospital and she stayed there until her mum died, holding hands. And she was really disoriented. And I started, very worried to see her like that. There are people who don’t believe in miracles, but I do. It was Susana’s miracle. When she saw that her mother had died, she said, “Yes, guys, let’s do that solve the problems now ” She has a lot of confidence and so do I. Susana gave her this example. And I think she will be well supported by that belief and will be good in her path in life. Because this was Susana’s legacy for her and she is very willing to follow it,” he told Quem.

She also said that the young woman, who lost her father at the age of 8, will have all the support of her family and that she is not alone: ​​”Julinha has an understanding that goes beyond her age. We were also very open with our family, especially my family is very close to them. She never lost touch with Criciúma, with Santa Catarina. The two went there at every opportunity. I insist on her very much: ‘Julia, you lost your mother, your father, but we are all family. Always count on it. You lost two people you love very much, you are suffering, but we are your family. And you don’t worry about that, we will be your family”.

burial

The funeral service for reporter Susana Naspolini, who died of cancer on Tuesday, will be held this morning at the São João Batista Cemetery Church in Botafogo, Rio de Janeiro.

The funeral service is public. The family urged the journalist’s fans not to film the coffin. The information has been confirmed syringes from the press office of TV Globo.

Julia, Susana’s daughter, invited her mother’s fans to the ceremony. “I come to invite you to say goodbye to Mama. She was always very happy to see everyone’s affection,” he wrote in a post on Instagram.

“Anyone who could go would be most welcome. I’m sure she would love it.”

Susana had been hospitalized in São Paulo for more than a week. The journalist was diagnosed with metastatic cancer in the hip bone.

In September, she spent eight days in Rio de Janeiro because of an infection and weak immunity.

Last week, Julia also posted a video on her mother’s profile, explaining the situation, which doctors considered very serious.

“She had hip bone metastases that had spread to the bone marrow since July. So she came in with stronger chemotherapy that caused her to lose her hair. But the metastases spread to several other organs, including the liver. The liver is very compromised. [o médico] said they didn’t know what else to do, they didn’t know if there was anything left to do and that her condition was very serious. I don’t know what to do,” the teenager said at the time.

Start in journalism

Susana Naspolini was born on December 20, 1972 in Criciúma, Santa Catarina. In 1991, at the age of 18, he was first confronted with cancer. At the time, she was studying journalism at the Federal University of Santa Catarina and had just started a theater course at Tablado in Rio de Janeiro to pursue her dream of working as an actress.

However, he had to abandon his studies after discovering a lymphoma. She underwent 12 chemotherapy sessions in São Paulo and lost her hair during the treatment.

At 19, Susana was hired by SBT in Florianópolis and worked there until she graduated. She then moved to RBS, Globo’s subsidiary in the south of the country, where she worked for two years as editorinchief and presenter of the local news programme.

He also had a brief stint at TV Vanguarda, a subsidiary of TV Globo in São José dos Campos, in the interior of São Paulo.

Success at Globo with RJ Mobile

In 2001 she met her husband Maurício Torres. In 2002, he, who worked at Esporte da Globo in Rio, nominated Susana for a temporary reporter position at GloboNews.

After two years as a reporter, he joined Canal Futura. He also worked in the production of Editoria Rio on TV Globo and in the reporting team of the television news programs Bom Dia Rio and RJTV. In 2008, in a rotating system with other reporters, he began presenting “RJ Móvel”, part of “RJ1”, the painting that would change his career. From 2013, she became the main moderator of the board.

In the attraction, residents of the capital Rio de Janeiro reported problems such as stopped work, deserted squares or potholed streets to the station. As a result, Susana took action and called a city or state government agency to provide live clarification and set a deadline for the issue to be resolved. The date was marked on a large calendar by the reporter. On the scheduled day, Susana returned to the site to collect the promised solution.

The journalist did all this with a lot of humor, trying to feel the evils of the population on her skin. He climbed walls and trees, entered holes, rode his bike over bumpy paths, and played with poorly maintained toys.

It was common to see her with costumes and props to illustrate the issue. He once disguised himself as an alligator to demand the renovation of a bridge in the Recreio dos Bandeirantes. On another occasion, he performed a “rain dance” to protest the lack of water in Nova Iguaçu. To celebrate the restoration of a seat in Bangu, she simulated an Oscars ceremony wearing a long dress, ice skating and sliding down the slide.

The villagers tell me the dramas and we create the situations together. It’s my duty to know what’s doable live and what’s not. If they can’t ride a bike, I have to show them. If the resident puts a plastic bag on his foot to go through the sewer, I put it in too. Susana Naspolini to UOL, in 2019

“I don’t create or enlarge. The reporter is a human being like anyone else who fulfills the duty of showing a problem. This is my fight,” he said in an interview with UOL in 2019.

The popular response was warm: Susana made live performances, drank coffee, ate barbecues, and sometimes even received gifts from the characters in her articles.

The relaxed manner led the journalist to the stands in Sapucaí during the carnival to report on the population’s reaction to the parades. In 2017 she also began presenting Globo Comunidade, which aired on Sunday mornings and featured articles produced by local newsrooms in Rio de Janeiro.

fights against cancer

After first confronting cancer in 1991, Susana returned nineteen years later, in 2010, at the age of 37 to battle the disease. She discovered a micro nodule in her breast, breast cancer, and after undergoing radiation therapy, she underwent a total mastectomy in her right breast. During treatment he also discovered a thyroid tumor.

In 2016, she was again confronted with breast cancer and spent about six months without television. At the end of the year he returned to command “RJ Móvel”, with rights to a party of flowers and cakes in the streets of Campo Grande, west of Rio, in addition to tributes from colleagues and spectators.

In 2020, Susana was diagnosed with pelvic cancer. Striving to update her followers about the treatment with a big smile, the journalist said she was comforted by the reactions of the people who followed her.

“I think life makes more sense when we share the happiest stories with the most difficult ones. When I found out about the diagnosis and took to Instagram to share it, I received so much affection that it gave me an injection of spirit. It makes a big difference in my state of mind. The stories encourage you to improve,” he said in an interview with Universa in April this year.

By July 2022, the disease had spread to the bone marrow and required heavier venous chemotherapy. The following month, she released a video of herself shaving her hair with the help of her daughter.

In September, Susana spent eight days in hospital treating an infection and weak immunity. She celebrated the release with a post alongside healthcare professionals on social media.

In October, Julia, the journalist’s daughter, reported that the metastases had spread to several other organs, damaging the liver and leaving the journalist in a very serious condition.