Marc Labreche on the way to Noovo

Play the offended Drag Queen |

Red, the color of passion, Coco Belliveau is this season’s painter.

Posted at 7:15am

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The revelation of this issue of Big Brother Celebrities, the 31-year-old academic comedian is positioning himself dangerously to star in the finale of Noovo’s reality show.

Again on Sunday night, as the red week evaporated on our TVs, Coco’s secret maneuvers to pulverize the powerful trio of Mona de Grenoble, Liliane Blanco-Binette and LeLouis Courchesne met with success.

With boss Zoé Duval, it was Coco Belliveau who set the trap that befell her two former after-party allies, including the formidable LeLouis Courchesne, who set the tone in the house studio. On the other hand, nobody will mourn the departure of Anas Hassouna. The 28-year-old comedian was no longer of any use in the game except to take a nap.

It was a siesta that killed our poor Anas. He was (still) dozing in the bedroom when Coco Belliveau revealed her Machiavellian plan to overthrow power. If Anas had heard Coco’s conversation, he could have saved his own skin or that of his pal LeLouis, oupsi.

She hides her tracks well, Coco. She lies, manipulates and feigns disappointment without being hated, in short, she maneuvers with ease in this universe of raptors and half-truths. It also has to be said that Coco Belliveau, who has watched all of Big Brother’s North American seasons, knows the game inside out and inside out.

Stunned, Mona de Grenoble fumed at not having been informed of the flip that was taking place. Mona, who delivers the best lines in the confessional, doesn’t have to play the offended drag queen. She herself fueled the heartbreaking eliminations of Benoît Gagnon and Alexandre Despatie. She knows these coups are secretly orchestrated to surprise competitors.

Damage, counterattack and take revenge, so Mona de Grenoble can return to the circle of winners. Not by feeling sorry for himself and positioning himself as a victim.

The crowning of Marianne Verville as the invisible boss will complicate the game for Mona and Liliane, who are now fighting Zoé, Marianne, Korine, Coco, Jemmy, Natalie and Marie-Christine. Of the last nine survivors, seven are women, farewell to the men’s club.

Brilliant in the show’s animation, Marie-Mai had donned her red leather Mackage trench coat to wrap up this week’s taste of blood from Big Brother celebs.

Compared to the ten campers from Get Me Out of Here! At TVA, we can say that the members of Big Brother arouse no sympathy with their gray slop and their twin beds strung together in a room of psychedelic colors.

The stars of Get Me Out Of Here!, which took on Big Brother celebrities on Sunday night, sleep in the middle of the Costa Rican jungle, exposed to the weather, surrounded by snakes, mosquitoes and other slimy bugs.

This first installment, a clever mix of Fort Boyard and Survivor, was very effective. The first cohort jumped into the adventure from a helicopter. In the second wave, the winner of Revolution 3, Rahmane Belkebiche, didn’t know Colette Provencher, Jean-François Mercier or Nathalie Simard, which made for some fun first encounters at a Rainforest Cafe of sorts.

I’m still not sure about the formula with two animators (in one jacket?), which doesn’t seem essential. The final two braves of Get Me Out of Here!, Andréanne A. Malette and Deano Clavet, end up in Sunday’s less punchy episode where Colette Provencher will vomit her pulp in an extreme dive test.

Play the offended Drag Queen

PHOTO PROVIDED OF THE PRODUCTION

Elysabeth Rivest and Marie France Lantin

At La voix, the first round of duels in Corneille’s team got off to a strong start with a solid Diva fight on Chaka Khan’s I’m Every Woman. Élysabeth Rivest, 33, was picked up by her trainer while her comrade Marie-France Lantin was robbed by Mario Pelchat.

A nice addition is the trainers’ verdict, which has a button indicating who they think the winner of the loud confrontation is. It’s fast, user-friendly and dynamic.

In the final number of the night, the most intense, Mario Pelchat juxtaposed his two best performers, Sophie Grenier and Steffy Beyong, on singer-songwriter Mentissa’s track Et bam. Obviously he wanted to keep one (Steffy) and save the other (Sophie).

This strategy could have blown before good Mario if Sophie Grenier, 17, had decided to take refuge with Marc Dupré, who was trying to steal her from her original coach.

At La voix, I always cringe when I hear two francophones like Mathieu Langlois and Vanessa Couture-Lacasse say that they have never sung in French, that they find it difficult to express themselves in their mother tongue, as if it were an insurmountable challenge . What world do you live in? Corneille offered them Croire en rien by Louis-Jean Cormier and it was Vanessa, 29, from Magog, who won the duel.

Marjo used the same trick as Mario Pelchat, crowning his contestant Philippe Plourde, 21, and protecting father-son duel loser Steven Grondin, 28. A strange choice, but good. Maybe Marjo is more sensitive to the invisible, to everything inside.