From January 2, on RMC Story from 9:10 p.m., the show bigdil will make his comeback on television after several years of absence. An event eagerly awaited by fans of the program which, as Vincent Lagaf’ recently announced during his previous appearance in C mediawill then be able to find the broadcast almost identically. “ Nothing has changed. The team is the same. We repeat a play with the same staging“, he proudly announced on December 15. But now, if the 65-year-old comedian is making his comeback on the small screen, it is not without a certain apprehension. Because as he recently confided in the pages of Leisure TVWednesday December 18, he did not have very good memories of the television industry.
Vincent Lagaf’ cash on the world of television: “I don’t have a friend in the business”
During this interview, Vincent Lagaf’ shared a mixed opinion on his television career. “I arrived in this profession by chance, a profession that I don’t like. Finally, I love my job, but I don’t like the environment in which it is.“, he said straight away. Very grateful to be able to win”a lot of money“Thanks to his job, however, he deplored only one thing: not having any real friends in the industry.”I don’t have a friend in the business“, he assured, before continuing: “For years, I alienated everyone because when someone pissed me off, I said, ‘You’re pissing me off.’ And you shouldn’t say that in the profession. That didn’t stop me, after 45 years, from still being here.”
Vincent Lagaf’ exhausted during the filming of bigdil ? “I lived at a crazy pace“
Obviously during this same interview, Vincent Lagaf’ also remembered the very sustained pace he followed when he was in charge of the bigdil. “When you’re on television, 240 days a year, plus prime time, plus galas, plus promotions… A while ago, I was 300 days a year on the sets or on a stage or on a construction site. work. There aren’t many of us who have this pace.“, he recalled. A frantic daily life that the presenter, now 65 years old, had difficulty letting go of. “So, obviously, when it goes down a little bit, we have the impression that it’s crossing the desert. But it’s when it goes down a little that we have a normal cadence. And I lived at a crazy pace“, he continued. Fortunately since then, Vincent Lagaf’ has found a much less rhythmic daily life.