The last decade of the second millennium was an amazing and turbulent one for Spain. The
1992 Summer Olympic Games were held in
Barcelona transforming the city entirely and showing the world the new open and democratic Spain after the
Francoist Dictatorship, the
1992 Universal Exposition was held in
Seville as Spain started an internationalization process to let the world get to know the country. Tourism flourished and so did the economy. What visitors did not know was that the country was in a process of moral reconstruction after a 35-year totalitarian dictatorship, and many were still fanatics of that kind of politics. The mentality of the dictatorship included press and personal
censorship,
repression and
persecution of minorities or left-wing people. After this dark period the social movement popularly known as "
Movida Madrileña" started. This movement consisted of making use of the freedom Spaniards had been deprived of. Musicians, journalists and ordinary people could now express themselves completely without being afraid of being taken to prison or being assassinated. Thus, Madrid became this paradise of liberty within Spain, filled with parties, wild life and cultural activities from all kinds of ideologies. The democratic transition started in the 1980s even though the essence and soul of
Franco was still present after his death. The first five years of the 1990s in Spain were a dark, life-changing period for the country due to the huge amount of corruption scandals,
terrorist attacks and the
murder of three 14-year-old girls in the province of Valencia. The girls (according to the official report) were kidnapped in November 1992 by two young men after they both agreed to take them to a youth club in
Picassent. They were taken to a ruined rural house in the middle of the hills in
Tous where they were raped, tortured and killed. Throughout the investigation, the discovery of the bodies in January 1993, their respective funerals and judgments, the media was always present since one of the girls' parents went to the press in first instance in order to help with the search for their daughter. When it was revealed that the girls
hitchhiked to get to the club (something very normal at that time), women's freedoms were considerably reduced due to the hysteria generated by this event. The essence of freedom in Spain declined and social chronic shows started appearing on national television. One of the most popular and most important of these was
Esta Noche Cruzamos el Mississippi (), hosted by journalist
Pepe Navarro. This TV show mixed humorous sketches and news of social chronicle. It is mostly known because of its humor and in major part due to its exhaustive investigation and reporting of the
Alcàsser Girls murder.
El Mississippi, aired on
Telecinco, became the most-watched late night show in Spain. In April 1996 journalist Faela Sainz, had to make a report for Navarro's show. After being scammed in her first attempt to report from
Chueca, Sainz drove to the
Parque del Oeste to film how
prostitution took place in Madrid, to show the world something that was still not talked about in the press. Separated in two "districts", the park was filled with
transgender and
cisgender prostitutes. The journalist, alongside a camera and audio man, interviewed some of them. At one point she interviews Cristina Ortiz Rodríguez who adopted the alias of "La Veneno" due to the 1976
Los Chunguitos track "Dame Veneno". The interview with La Veneno aired on live television on 15 April. The audience constantly wrote into the show asking when she was going to make an appearance. After two weeks of insisting, Ortiz made an appearance on the show on 29 April 1996 and became a regular castmember. Her undeniable beauty, unbelievably raw stories, coarse language, light and sense of humor captivated the public, making Navarro's show reach 8 million viewers every time she made an appearance. La Veneno became one of the first transgender people to show Spain the raw but true reality of prostitution, poverty and disrespect for minorities even from their own family members. Since that moment, she became an instant
LGBT icon in Spain and a voice for all transgender people who have been repressed for their personal identity. When
Esta Noche Cruzamos el Mississippi ended in 1997, La Veneno did two R-rated movies, released an EP and continued appearing in other television shows like
La Sonrisa del Pelícano or
Sálvame. In 2003 she was sent to prison due to fraud. After being released from prison in 2006, a transgender student
Valeria Vegas from the
University of Valencia met La Veneno and became close with her. In October 2016 La Veneno's memories "
¡Digo! Ni Puta ni Santa. Las Memorias de la Veneno" (), written by Vegas, were released. ==Cast==