On Saturday November 9, 2024, Léa Salame offered its loyal viewers a new episode of What an era!orchestrated with his usual finesse. And at the end of the show, his sidekick Philippe Caverivière did not fail to add a touch of humor about the recent misadventures of Raphaël Glucksmanncompanion of the journalist. In October, Le Point revealed that the MEP, by moving into his late father's apartment, André Glucksmannhad embarked on an ambitious sorting of the family library. Only here: everything did not go as planned! While trying to move the imposing piece of furniture, the MEP “damaged the back“, victim of an unexpected domestic accident which cost him some pain.
Léa Salamé: her companion does not escape criticism
The dear and tender of Léa Salamé now sports a corset, a direct result of her recent moving acrobatics. Taking the opportunity to tease the journalist, Philippe Caverivière said, with his spicy humor: “I stayed attentive to the news and I did well because it had a major political event which was reported in an investigative newspaper, Gala, I believe.“A comment which immediately caused amusement – and slight discomfort – from the journalist, who exclaimed: “Oh no!” in a burst of laughter.
Not stopping there, the famous comedian continued in a tone of derision: “Your roommate, your roommate++, Raphaël Glucksmann, injured his back while moving his library… we didn't come far from a very rotten death!“A dig which amused the public and the guests, before Caverivière had fun parodying a television news show in front of the camera, adding an offbeat touch to his column.
Léa Salamé reframes Philippe Caverivière
The comedian did not fail to make fun of Raphaël Glucksmann's misadventure, imagining the MEP buried under his mountain of books, “notably the complete Harlequin“. Léa Salamé, a little perplexed, then says to him: “Is this really necessary?“, which does not stop his colleague. He continues, describing with irony a library filled with “dicos, encyclopedias, books by his dad André and the Pléiade“. Then, with a falsely overwhelmed air, he concluded: “Culture is heavy!“
To complete his tirade, the native of Beauvais
compares his friend's move to that of an intellectual, adding a touch of contrast. “While an idiot like me, you move him… Florent Peyremy friend, took a quarter of an hour to transport two Pif Gadgets, a Playstation, a frame with a jersey Jean-Pierre Papin autographed, and two gold square tickets for Les Forbans.“A move that is done quickly, for sure!
“I like mixtures”
Some time ago, Léa Salamé joined Cyril Féraud to present the Victoires de la Musique, an appointment that she accepted without hesitation. His argument? “There aren't many events on TV that bring everyone together.“A return to television sources for the journalist, but what about her favorite terrain, political interviews? As the European elections loomed, she made a radical decision: to put the brakes on political interviews, at least temporarily.”For Europeans, I stop. I say it in a simple way because it is totally in agreement with my management of France 2 and France Inter, like my companion [Raphaël Glucksmann] is a candidate, I'm going to withdraw from political broadcasts and a gradual withdrawal will take place from April, until the official campaign period,” she confided.
But this pause does not reflect a lack of interest in politics; she simply wants diversity in her exchanges. Questioned on this subject, she was clear: “Yes, I'm still interested. It's my DNA, it's my passion. But more and more, I like mixtures. I take more pleasure at the moment in questioning artists, their visions of the era, in questioning the great intellectuals than undoubtedly the politiciansbecause the political language has changed, because the political language has been formatted, it has become many elements of language. She confides that she prefers these spontaneous exchanges, far from the sanitized world of current political language.
Indeed, according to the woman who was caught flirting with François Hollande, political discourse has lost its authenticity, imprisoned in “language elements” formatted. Nostalgic for the time when each interview was an adventure, she regrets: “When I started political journalism, my microphone was shaking. You had to try to be smartto find the right question, to destabilize.“But today everything seems.”more settled“, and Léa Salamé deplores this lack of spontaneity and “chair” which once animated his political confrontations.
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