Débora Estrella, a familiar face on Mexican television, was killed Saturday when the small Cessna she was learning to fly crashed shortly after takeoff. She was 43. Authorities confirmed that the instructor-pilot, Bryan Ballesteros, also died in the accident.
From weather presenter to morning anchor
Estrella’s career in broadcast journalism began at TV Azteca in 2014, where she presented the weather before moving to Mexico City to work on news programming. After leaving TV Azteca in 2016, she joined Multimedios Televisión and later became part of the team at Milenio Televisión. By 2018 she had become the main anchor of Telediario Matutino on Channel 6, earning a steady following for her on-screen warmth and professionalism.
A lesson that ended in tragedy
Friends say Estrella had recently begun taking flying lessons. On September 20, 2025, she boarded a two-seat Cessna in the municipality of García, Nuevo León, accompanied by instructor Bryan Ballesteros. The aircraft crashed near an industrial sector shortly after leaving the runway. Civil Protection officials confirmed two fatalities at the scene.
Hours before the flight, Estrella posted a photo of the plane to her Instagram Story with the caption, “Guess what.” Unverified videos circulating online appear to show the small plane spiraling as it fell to the ground. The crash occurred near the Ciudad Mitras industrial estate, according to early reports.
Immediate shock and public sorrow
News of the accident rippled quickly through social media and the newsroom community. Estrella’s ex-husband, journalist José Luis García, initially shared the news of the crash before learning she had been on board. Colleagues and viewers responded with grief and disbelief.
On air, fellow journalist María Julia Lafuente struggled to contain her emotion, asking rhetorically how one could offer a routine greeting while “our hearts and souls are broken.” Social feeds were filled with brief, heartfelt messages — “Fly high Débora. Rest in peace,” read one. Another tribute remembered her “signature smile” and called her “a bright soul gone too soon.”
Last conversations and a fledgling dream
Friends recalled that Estrella had recently confided in them about her new pursuit. Víctor Martínez, a close friend who spent time with her the day before at a birthday celebration, said she spoke enthusiastically about beginning flight lessons and joked about flying together one day. Their last exchange, he said, was a promise to see each other more and to one day share that flight.
One poignant comment shared online suggested the occupants tried to steer the stricken aircraft away from denser neighborhoods, a move attributed to bravery in the face of catastrophe: “They were trying to maneuver… to avoid hitting a populated area,” the message read. Those who knew her have interpreted such reports as emblematic of the courage friends say she carried in life.
A life remembered
Débora Estrella built a career on clear delivery and an approachable presence, and in recent months she had been pursuing a new, personal ambition: to fly. Her death has left colleagues, friends and viewers mourning not only a seasoned journalist but a person who embraced life’s next chapter with curiosity and joy.
Her legacy — the warmth she brought to morning broadcasts, the laughter she shared with colleagues, and the enthusiasm she showed for new challenges — will be what many remember most.