Since September 2022, Léa Salamé has been presenting and hosting the program “Quelle Époque” broadcast on Saturday evenings on France 2. Alongside Christophe Dechavanne and facing guests related to current events, the journalist finds herself on a weekly basis at the heart of debates and discussions that are sometimes stormy and crispy… and the success is there as the program breaks audience records.
This Wednesday, April 19, 2023, the journalist was a guest of the Konbini media program “Small Talk”, in order to review her entire career. During the interview, Léa Salamé thus admitted to having “taken a big head” during the period when she was a columnist alongside Aymeric Caron, then Yann Moix in “We are not lying” on France 2. “Suddenly, I’m going to switch from a form of small notoriety of a girl from iTélé, but not much, to the one who is on the front page of all the magazines” she said before admitting that the celebrity is her a bit to the head: “And there, I was 34 or 35 years old, inevitably there is a moment when we are out of whack. And that’s when we believe that his questions are more important than the answers, and that there was a little crack. It didn’t last very long, but probably a few months”.
Léa Salamé “fired”: “I had trouble with authority…”
Very honest, Léa Salamé also returned in this interview, returning to her adolescence marked by nonsense: “I stayed in Franklin with the Jesuits from the sixth to the third before being fired for indiscipline! I did a lot bullshit,” she said. “We had made a teachers’ notebook where we made fun, we said sexual things that we didn’t even understand at 13 years old” she then remembered.
The mother of a 5-year-old boy then admitted to having been a difficult teenager: “First I had trouble with authority, then I discovered boys. It was absolutely necessary to please boys so I ‘to add to it… My parents were summoned every two months and they were told: ‘She said this again’, ‘she talks in class’, ‘she talks bullshit’, ‘she cuts off’. to live the horror to my parents. I was waiting for them to sleep and I was fleeing through the door of the service to go party… They freaked out with me, my parents” she confessed.
And the 43-year-old mother concludes with a little analysis of the situation: “But hey, I think it’s not so bad because when you have a very tight teenage crisis, over two or three years , from 14 to 17 years old, after that it’s over, it’s over! But hey, it was tight at home… “.
Léa Salamé recounts the nonsense of her adolescence in Small Talk with David Castello-Lopes. Léa Salamé’s Small Talk is available in full on YouTube: https://t.co/YgzCzPlaGK: https://t.co/YgzCzPlaGK: https://t.co/YgzCzPlaGKpic.twitter.com/zKrC1iV3KO
— Konbini (@KonbiniFr) April 19, 2023
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