Jean-Luc Reichmann has been at the helm of 12 coups de midi for 14 years. The host is currently in the process of renewing his contract with TF1 and he is hoping for a big change.
Since 2010, Jean-Luc Reichmann has reigned supreme at 12 noon strikes. A show dear to his heart where he sees champions parade by, each more talented than the last, who chain together victories at a crazy speed. Since September 25, Nathalie Lecoultre’s companion thus finds himself every day with happiness at Emilien’s side, the biggest player in the TF1 program with 279 participations and 1,204,871 euros in prize money. A record that delights the 63-year-old presenter, who also thrives as an actor, playing in the theatre and in the police series Léo Matteï, Juvenile Brigade. But there is no question of abandoning the controls of the 12 noon strikes which still fascinates him and allows him to maintain a very strong bond with his audience.
Jean-Luc Reichmann cash on his future at TF1
After 14 years of good and loyal service, Jean-Luc Reichmann is currently in the process of renewing his contract with the first channel.. An important moment for the host who hopes for a small change concerning his professional future. In the columns of TV Magazinehe notably confirmed that he was in discussion with TF1 management about the number of shows he shoots per day for The 12 strokes of noon. A hellish pace that he now hopes to slow down to devote himself to his loved ones.
“I have been with them for twenty-four years, so that shows that there is respect on both sides.he assured. Today I finish five shows a day.. I don’t want to work on an assembly line, to become a gaming industrialist. What’s the point of being on air every day?plus fifty bonuses per year, plus the theater… My goal is not to overdo it.but to keep time for myself, for my family.“This feeling is also most certainly shared by the midday masters who must resist and keep up the pace during days or even months of competition.
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