At 35, Jeremstar has decided to tell everything about the “very dangerous world” of reality TV, which he preferred to leave. After his media “descent into hell”, he returns today to his Youtube channel to unpack his memories, his intimate notes that can be discovered in his new book “Survivor of social networks”, published by Hugo Doc.
Among other subjects, those of drugs and prostitution are at the heart, according to him, of the system. And with impunity. Extracts.
“I’m hallucinating, there are so many drugs on the sets of reality TV… It was the day off for the candidates and they all went to town, in the evening there are at least five who brought back some coke. And they took some in the garden without hiding. I don’t understand how they can screw up their health like that, it’s creepy. Finally, I believe that the worst is especially the employees of the production who type lines with the candidates. They give them a ticket to reimburse them because they had to stay there to work on the next sequences for the next day. Mind-blowing, everyone sees but no one says anything.”
“Paying someone to have sex in a program: it has a name!”
Regarding prostitution, here are the confidences of the former columnist of Thierry Ardisson: “Tonight I ate with the producer of (Name Bippé) on the Champs-Elysées, in his favorite restaurant. He wanted to ask me my opinion on the candidates he had selected for the next season of (Name Bippé). He asked my opinion on ‘what bitch to bring in to boost the program’, these are his words, and he hesitated between (Name Bippé) and (Name Bippé). He says they fuck easily with guys and that’s bound to cause trouble since they’re going to break up couples. He bluntly told me that he was going to pay them twice as much as the others to be sure that they ‘do the job’” Jeremstar comments: seriously, I really feel like I’m dealing with a guy who hassled its candidates. “Apparently, the girls will touch 7,500 balls instead of 3,000, I believe for two weeks…” The reading stops there, and Jeremstar comments on this extract: “It is trivialization of prostitution because, honestly , paying someone to have sex on a program to screw it up, I’m sorry: it has a name!” And to add that this environment is particularly misogynistic, sending back a terrible image of women… he himself apologizes for it today.
France Live
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Prostitution in reality TV: Maissane des Marseillais unpacks everything!