David Broncano promised an international star — and once again, he delivered. Turkish actor Can Yaman took center stage on La Revuelta, turning his appearance into a lesson in hard work, humor, and love for the Spanish language.
After only a year of studying, the Sandokan actor impressed everyone with his fluency and ease, conducting the entire interview in Spanish. “All in Spanish, please. No English. It’s a challenge for me,” he said right at the start. The host couldn’t hide his amazement: “You speak like this after just a year? This guy’s incredible,” Broncano laughed.
The Daydreamer star isn’t just fluent in Turkish, Italian, and English — he’s now added Spanish to his list, thanks to a surprisingly effective learning method. “My vocabulary is huge. I brought two notebooks filled with swear words, sayings, and expressions,” Yaman confessed, while Broncano flipped through one of them in disbelief. Among the handwritten expressions were local gems like ser un paquete, chapuza, and mojar el churro.
The audience burst into laughter, and Broncano couldn’t resist joking: “This is one of the coolest things anyone’s brought here in a long time. I could spend the entire interview just reading these notebooks.”
After only a year of studying, the Sandokan actor impressed everyone with his fluency and ease, conducting the entire interview in Spanish. “All in Spanish, please. No English. It’s a challenge for me,” he said right at the start. The host couldn’t hide his amazement: “You speak like this after just a year? This guy’s incredible,” Broncano laughed.
The Daydreamer star isn’t just fluent in Turkish, Italian, and English — he’s now added Spanish to his list, thanks to a surprisingly effective learning method. “My vocabulary is huge. I brought two notebooks filled with swear words, sayings, and expressions,” Yaman confessed, while Broncano flipped through one of them in disbelief. Among the handwritten expressions were local gems like ser un paquete, chapuza, and mojar el churro.
The audience burst into laughter, and Broncano couldn’t resist joking: “This is one of the coolest things anyone’s brought here in a long time. I could spend the entire interview just reading these notebooks.”
Learning Spanish… with Broncano as His Teacher
But the real surprise came when Yaman explained how he learned the language. “I had a private Instagram account, without my name, where I only followed Spanish pages. I mostly followed you and La Revuelta to understand things with subtitles,” he said, laughing.Si aprendes español escuchando a Broncano, te dan una silla en la RAE directamente. #LaRevuelta pic.twitter.com/NHJYNXRRRe
— La Revuelta (@LaRevuelta_TVE) October 23, 2025
Then came the line that instantly went viral: “I was getting frustrated because I didn’t understand you.”
“I used to say, ‘What is this guy saying? I don’t get it.’ So you’re my idol. I came here running, just like you do at the beginning of the show,” the actor added.
Amused, Broncano replied with his trademark irony: “We’re like two drops of water — twin brothers.”
To top it off, Yaman surprised the host with a personal gift: Memories of Distant Mountains, a book by Turkish Nobel laureate Orhan Pamuk. Inside, he’d written a playful challenge: “An arm wrestle and a mountain — let’s see who wins.”
Broncano, a passionate mountaineer, accepted with a grin: “You’d beat me at arm wrestling, but I’d win climbing mountains.”
At 36, Can Yaman (born in Istanbul in 1989) has become an international star, known for his talent, his mastery of languages, and a career that spans both law and acting. He’s now preparing to shoot a new series in Spain, where he plays “Kaplan, a secret service agent” — a role that, he admits, “requires a lot of training.”🇪🇸 El increíble nivel de español de Can Yaman.
— La Revuelta (@LaRevuelta_TVE) October 23, 2025
Pensábamos que igual tocaba entrevista en inglés y el tío sabe todas las palabrotas y "mojar el churro". Podríamos haber hecho toda la entrevista leyendo ese cuaderno, qué gracioso #Larevuelta pic.twitter.com/pPeIjVDQnN
His appearance on RTVE’s show was full of warmth, humor, and genuine connection, with an audience that couldn’t stop cheering. “That felt too short. Can I stay?” Yaman asked as the show wrapped up.
Broncano laughed and shot back: “You stay — I’m off to learn Turkish.”
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