This Monday, social networks filled with the phrase “Hello, a poem?” product of a viral tweet. In it you could see a screenshot of a conversation between two people, where a woman left her partner with a long message and the boyfriend’s reply to her was limited to that simple reply. The truth is that now, days later, someone discovered that the author of that answer could only be Pablo Aimar.
Earlier this week, Twitter user @muyAgustina rose to fame by posting a tweet that read: “It turns out that I wrote a very long text to explain, in a politically correct way, that I was leaving him. After thinking and thinking about it, I plucked up the courage and sent it to him. This was his answer”. And she attached a picture of the conversation.
In that screenshot, she was seen leaving her partner and arguing: “I love you so much, of course I love you. Although today I can’t even be objective because I want more than usual, I still miss you when I see and hear you between my mouth of my stomach, where happiness used to tickle me and today my body reminds me that I have to leave you to be well again.”
«That it won’t be possible with you because I don’t feel like this anymore. I don’t feel like this anymore. You are no longer here, even when you are here », Agustina also wrote. “You are no longer eye shine and smile just because. Today you are anxiety and uncertainty. Fear and anguish. The distance and the glass that cut my feet when…”, continued the long farewell text that was read in the capture.
Furthermore, we read that faced with so many words of love and heartbreak, the recipient of that message could not understand that he had been left and could only reply: “Hello, a poem?”.
After that conversation went viral, that short sentence was enough for the tweet to be replicated and commented on by thousands of accounts, national and international.
they even did major brands and even Bizarrap use it to announce their new video and song in collaboration with Mexican artist Peso Pluma.
But what no one suspected at first it was that the author of that message could be none more and none less than Pablo Aimar.
Until a 2018 photo of Lionel Scaloni’s assistant in the Argentina national team together with the tweeter sparked the rumors who would write the viral response.
The word of the protagonist before these versions
Once the rumor that the footballer would be the author of the sentence that went viral in recent days, Twitter user @muyagustina gave mixed signals as to whether or not it was him.
First, he retweeted the comment that started these releases and added, “I didn’t see this coming.” And, as if that weren’t enough, afterwards began sharing all the tweets that associated the former River striker with the famous response.
But invited to the program I listen to offers (streamed This is Blender, at 10), Agustina said that the relationship, which ended last Monday, started last summer. Also, she detailed who was part of the club of which he is a fan: Quilmes.
So, without referring directly to the entry, excluding that Aimar is the man of the viral tweet. Firstly because the photo in which he appears with him is from 2018. And secondly because Scaloni’s assistant has never been linked to the club in the south of Buenos Aires.
Furthermore, he ensured that the the man in question would be the city of La Platawhile living in Parque Chacabuco.
“Today I woke up with the news that I had broken the Scaloneta, they found a photo of me with a footballer and accused me of it.“said Agustina on the streaming channel.
When asked about the origin of that image, she explained and unlinked it: “The photo is real, it was in a program that Iván Noble had on the Encuentro channel, but now they believe that the one with ‘Hello, a poem?’ it was there”.
Source: Clarin