Comedians Corbacho and Fernández Sell Out Andorra Show with *David y Jose, no somos Estopa*
The duo reunited for an improvised mix of career anecdotes and generational banter, drawing 180 fans and touching on local politics and Eurovision memories.
Key Points
- Comedians José Corbacho and David Fernández sold out Andorra's Green Box venue with 180 fans for *David y Jose, no somos Estopa*.
- Show featured improvised career anecdotes, generational banter, and Eurovision memories.
- Intergenerational crowd from TV shows like *Tu cara me suena* and Chikilicuatre.
- Touched on Andorran politics with references to Chikilicuatre and local leaders.
Comedians José Corbacho and David Fernández drew a full house of 180 at Andorra's Green Box venue in Unnic for their new show *David y Jose, no somos Estopa*.
The duo described the production as an excuse to reunite on stage after nearly three decades of collaboration, poking fun at their own careers and public images. "We don't care much about what we've done or who we are," Corbacho said, explaining how the format ditches traditional stand-up monologues for a fresh, unpredictable mix of personal stories, professional anecdotes, and on-the-fly improvisation drawn from their tour experiences.
The intergenerational crowd spanned fans familiar with their TV hits like *Tu cara me suena*, *Masterchef*, and Fernández's Eurovision entry as Chikilicuatre. "We've done so many things that younger people who don't know us from one show know us from another," Fernández noted. The pair bantered about their broad appeal: a 12-year-old might discover Chikilicuatre through a parent, prompting Corbacho to quip, "Tell him to play some good music, like Bad Bunny."
They highlighted comedy's reliance on cultural references to bridge generations, with everything from recent tour mishaps becoming material. "We want people to leave laughing and surprised by what they saw," they said.
The show touched on Andorran politics when Fernández recalled a recent Consell General reference to Chikilicuatre. Corbacho teased him: "Don't take offense—you might not get out of Andorra much." Fernández shrugged it off as a matter of taste, lamenting his 16th-place Eurovision finish despite stronger entries ranking lower.
Corbacho sent a playful kiss to Ciutadans Compromesos leader Carles Naudi, who on Thursday likened Concòrdia's open-list proposal to opening doors for figures like Chikilicuatre or Torrente. "At least he used comedy," Corbacho laughed, noting global examples of popular votes leading to questionable leaders—and how Eurovision's public voting experiment ended after that year.
Looking ahead, the comedians left the door open for a return to Andorra if the reception stays strong. "If they welcome you well, you have to come back," they concluded, joking about future stops in Las Vegas and Madison Square Garden.
Original Sources
This article was aggregated from the following Catalan-language sources: