Guest of Mouloud Achour's talk show, this Wednesday, November 6, the comedian confided to having regretted his participation in “DALS” and the extent given by the press to his altercation with Natasha St Pier.
It must have been a careful communications operation. An unprecedented meeting with the public – its 2 million followers, TF1 viewers and many others – with a spotlight on the stage for several weeks, endless laughs, some good efforts Of course, a lot of sweat too to live up to the challenges of the TF1 competition and stay in the spotlight as long as possible, new friends, perhaps, and a lot of joy.
But there you go. If a lot of ink and bandwidth were spilled during Ines Reg's participation, seven months ago, in the 13th season of “Dancing with the Stars”, the comedian today regrets having participated in the show, further deploring the media impact of his altercation with Quebec singer Natasha St-Pier. In “Clique”, this Wednesday, November 6, on Canal+, she declared:
“It reminded me that life is not just a game”
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“I took it as a vacation, what a mistake! Frankly, it's a mistake. To be very sincere, I was there, saying to myself, “Ah, I’m going to wear dresses and sequins, so good!” (…) Like, every Friday evening, I'm going to put on dresses, sequins, I'm going to do shows and invite my whole family. “That’s what I did when I was little, but this version is 300,000 times better.”
Further on, facing Mouloud Achour, she returned to the much harsher reality of the show. The colossal training sessions, the rivalry between the participants and of course, his altercation with Natasha St-Pier and with the latter's coach. “Actually, it reminded me that life is not a game”she notes. Then add: “At the time, someone was following me and filming everything that was happening and I remember saying, 'I think, guys, we shouldn't do this'.”.
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Despite this, the young thirty-something went there. And today, she regrets it: “I’m ashamed. I'm a victim of this thing, but ultimately, it's still my name, my career, my life, me, my integrity, my person. And it’s totally the culture of emptiness. What drives me crazy is that we're making a story about something I didn't want to make. And so, I find myself talking about it and it pisses people off…”. Why, then, did you decide to evoke it, through a karaoke caricature, in your new show?
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