[3][4] After three years, she got a divorce and moved back to Barcelona, where she worked in newspapers and radio and got involved with Spanish feminism by starting the group LAMAR (the Antipatriarchal Struggle of Antiauthoritarian and Revolutionary Women).
[5] In 1981, together with María Rodrguez Bayraguet, she translated for the Icaria publishing house in Barcelona the book by Ayatollah Jomeini entitled Principios políticos, filosóficos, sociales y religiosos, which had great repercussions.
In 1984, she moved to Madrid, where she began her television career in the program Informe Semanal, of Televisión Española,[2] with outstanding reports on politics, interviewing, among others, Adolfo Suárez, already ex–president of the Spanish Government, and Josep Tarradellas, recently elected president of Catalonia.
At the public broadcaster, she made reports for programs such as Informe Semanal or La Tarde and also participated in others such as Segundos fuera (1986)[9] and Radio Nacional de España.
At the end of the 1980s, she returned to the private media, working for a decade for the Grupo Z weeklies Panorama Internacional (1987– 1988) and Tiempo (1988–1997) doing interviews, opinion columns, and social chronicles.
She combined written journalism with radio (she replaced Jesús Mariñas in the COPE channel's Protagonistas by Luis del Olmo in 1988) [10] and television collaborations.
She focused her career on television, and her popularity grew exponentially, including making advertising spots, participating in reality shows, and giving paid interviews.