Unfortunately, it was dancer Rahmane Belkebiche’s turn to gather his bundle and leave the “Get me out of here!” adventure on Sunday evening.
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The winner of the third season of “Revolution” was the slowest to unscrew, with his tongue, the two crosses that were in the box filled with cockroaches that imprisoned his head.
A somewhat heartbreaking defeat, he admitted in an interview with the QMI Agency, but still well received. “The organization I chose (100Lux) really made a difference in my life and I would have liked it to give back to them as much. […] On the other hand, humanly speaking, I felt that I had done what I had to do in this adventure,” he said with serenity and gratitude, meaning that he had earned three times what he had lost by leaving the game.
He faced for this elimination challenge Jean Michel and Andréanne. The evening had however started well for his team, the oranges. Thanks to the efforts of François Marquis and Colette Provencher, who opposed Marianne St-Gelais and Nathalie Simard, the oranges were able to enjoy a tasty poke bowl, at the end of a basket throwing competition, which has been taking place since a thin platform above a deep canyon.
“Vulnerability is good”
Since his release, Rahmane describes his adventure to “Get me out of here!” like a kind of pilgrimage where he enjoyed himself and was surprised to go beyond his physical, mental and even social limits.
“It was amazing to have an intergenerational experience with people who were doing zero the same thing as me. […] It was beautiful to see everyone letting themselves be vulnerable. I learned about myself. I learned about others. Besides, I didn’t know anyone. It was above all a human and fairer experience of TV, ”he argued.
During his stay at the Costa Rican camp, Rahmane forged very strong ties with Nathalie Simard and Andréanne A. Malette, but he especially grew closer to speed skater and three-time Olympic medalist Marianne St-Gelais, from whom he learned a lot. . “I love him so much. I just saw myself so much in her on a lot of aspects of athletes who are just trying to rob this thing to become a little more human,” he said, specifying that even in dance, the concern for performance and the formalities (image, rank, skills) sometimes take precedence over the human.
“My experience has been really enriching. I saw that vulnerability was good, ”he also confided.
The young dancer, who would have liked to do all the challenges, with the exception of the one where he had to eat insects and special dishes, particularly appreciated the spirit of conviviality that the show encouraged. “It was beautiful to see people create a family. It doesn’t matter where you come from and whether you have a family or not. The only thing we had was us,” he said during the interview.
“Me in this adventure, I always wanted to be a pillar. I was like the sun in that “cast”. But it’s that in life I learned to be my sun before I saw it. In life, the family is a privilege. This is not the basis for everyone,” he added.
By leaving “Get me out of here!”, Rahmane was able to find his dog, the dance and the music that he had missed so much.
The reality show “Get Me Out of Here!” is broadcast on TVA every Sunday at 6:30 p.m.