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Double occupancy Andalusia | You woke up too late – La Presse

The air will be “very heavy,” says the good and smiling Simon in the daily Double Occupation that Noovo will pass on on Tuesday and Wednesday.

Published at 2:04 am. Updated at 7:15 a.m.

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Finally, real arguments, frustrated competitors and tears that don’t shed tears of joy, which is what OD has been sorely missing this fall, while reality TV Cupid ushered in a romantic, syrupy twist that pleased sponsors but less so viewers.

On Tuesday evening, the contestants undergo a rather gruesome question game to win their plane tickets to the Maldives and the latent tensions come to the surface. It’s candy. On Wednesday night, as in the olé olé years of OD, the content producer intervenes in the episode to calm a person in complete delirium. Note: It is not the nurse Marie-Andrée, 26, fan of the work of British writer Holly Bourne, author of “The Places I’ve Cried in Public”.

Wednesday’s daily also contains a very surprising eviction that causes great unrest in the house, which is mixed again. Vintage OD the way we like it. It’s a shame that these twists happened so late in the season, less than a week before the grand finale.

No matter what’s brewing in the cans, it’s Lara, a 27-year-old fashion representative, and Vincent, a 26-year-old carpenter, who win the Andalusian edition of OD. To paraphrase 22-year-old Queen of Franglais Mia, they are the “golden couple in love since day one.”

Any contestant with a bit of strategy (we’re betting on the clear Antoine) would have planned to take out Lara and Vincent, the “naughtiest couple in the history of OD”, as they say, and who are almost guaranteed to win half a million in prizes.

You have to believe that the audience loves the two lovebirds from Boisbriand and Longueuil who make “perfume popsicles”, hug each other’s thighs and give us dripping moments like “The Notebook”. Thank you, Antoine, for these evangelical words.

Anthony, 27, tried to emulate his fellow carpenter by spraying his Bobettes with his perfume and giving them to his sweetheart Marie-Andrée, with a less cutesy effect, shall we say. This flavored gift did not turn Marie-Andrée upside down, unlike the poet Anthony on a zip line.

On Sunday night, hosts Fred Robichaud and Alicia Moffet fueled a false promise (again): OD’s most heartbreaking decision ripped nothing, except maybe the knee of Anthony’s black jeans. Beads of sweat stood on their foreheads and Anthony and Marie-Andrée had the “difficult task” of catapulting a couple straight onto their final journey. Unsurprisingly, the Untouchables Lara and Vincent – ​​they are perfect! – inherited this air privilege. Note that Lara used all the vowels of the alphabet (note bene, note biene, note bien, note bieno) before getting to the exact wording of nota bene.

Double occupancy Andalusia You woke up too late –

PHOTO TAKEN FROM THE SHOW’S FACEBOOK PAGE

Fred Robichaud and Alicia Moffet

Now there are some “super vile” phrases that the production should ban from future editions. For example: “We are all winners because we found love in OD”, “Everyone deserves their place in the finale”, “We are not here to judge others’ romantic potential” and “Every couple has equal value .” It is wrong. Stop lying to yourself and especially not believing in it, holy Christ of holy Christ, Anthony would say.

Of the four couples still in the running for Ray Junior Courtemanche’s Mirabel apartment, Simon and Mia go last as they are the only ones who haven’t said the magic words that aren’t “Really little date.” Without Lara and Vincent, Anthony and Marie-Andrée seem to be more advanced in their “relationship” than the finance director Mathieu P., 24 years old, and the social worker Rebecca, 26 years old.

Even if the story of OD Andalusia was not interrupted by savory moments (forget the expression crunchy-melting, it never worked), the editing of the episodes as well as the sound and visual effects were well done. There was a lot of film work with very little paid material.

It must not have been easy to capture this Spanish chapter in pictures. Especially when chilly participants like Vincent systematically refuse to get wet (you’ll see that on Tuesday) and hide between the cushions and the sofa (it’s a must-have couch, it’s written on the wall in neon colors).

What did we do with the pipes?

I’m not a doctor and of course I don’t operate. The tube that enters poor Tricus’ (Jonathan Caron) nostril in the emergency room is a stomach tube called a Levin tube, which he uses to eat, not breathe.

Many thanks to the 132 enteral health specialist readers who enriched my personal medical vade mecum. In addition, the metal sword that pierced the strange Tricus and the saber that disfigured the globetrotter Élodie (Mirianne Brûlé) in “Indefensible” provide many exciting intrigues in our daily lives.

Cutscenes that damage the reputation of life-sized enthusiasts and samurai apprentices.