There is one thing that Cyril Hanouna cannot help but do: question his columnists and his guests on their private lives and more particularly on their romantic stories. In the broadcast of Don't touch my post This Tuesday, November 26, Fabien Lecoeuvre made a shocking revelation about a relationship he had at the age of 13.
While he was discussing the documentary Elton
John : Never too late, which he had fun translating as
“never too late”Cyril Hanouna was quick to question him about his language skills. “You took Spanish as a second language, didn’t you?”he joked. To which Fabien Lecoeuvre responded: “Yes, but I was bad at language, though I was going out with my teacher. My English teacher”, he says.
Fabien Lecoeuvre was going out with his 27-year-old teacher
An anecdote which very quickly aroused the curiosity of the flagship presenter of C8. “No, but who cares about Elton John, did you go out with your English teacher?”he exclaims. “Oui,
she was 27 at the time“adds the chronicler, before specifying that he was aged “13 years and two months” at that time.
“Yes, but he was the same size. He didn’t gain an inch” declares Cyril Hanouna with a laugh. Fabien Lecoeuvre continues his story: “As I was not very good in English, my mother took me reinforced English lessons. And I improved”. “Actually, you were doing…” reacts the one we nickname “Baba”before being interrupted by his guest. “My sex education”he slips.
Fabien Lecoeuvre: “a beautiful love story”
“No, that’s not true? But it's hotshe was 27 and you were 13″wonders Cyril Hanouna. But despite this relationship of a shocking nature, Fabien Lecoeuvre affirms that it was “a beautiful love story”. This woman in question “was transferred a year later, because there were noises, rumors…”. “It’s a bit Die to love, but no one killed themselves in the end. Stories like that can happen“, he adds.
Faced with this revelation, Valérie Bénaïm reacts: “Yes but in Die to love,
he was 17, not 13. Excuse me, but I it shocks me. I’m ruining the atmosphere, but hey.” “But I didn’t ask for anything.”defends Fabien Lecoeuvre before recalling that he was “consenting”.