Cyril Hanouna: French host humiliated gay men on live TV - WELCOME TO THEWATCHNEWS. : WORLD NEWS & ENTERTAINMENT.

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Monday, 22 May 2017

Cyril Hanouna: French host humiliated gay men on live TV




Some number of people have complained after a French
 TV presenter posted a spoof ad on a gay dating website 
and made fun of people who responded live on air.

Cyril Hanouna used a feminine tone of voice and tricked
 those he spoke to into revealing their sexual fantasies.

One of the victims was left in a "state of appalling 
distress", LGBT campaigners said.

They accused the presenter of homophobia.

Nearly 20,000 complaints about the segment on Mr Hanouna's nightly show Touche pas à mon poste (TPMP - "Don't touch my TV" in English) had been made to the media regulator by Monday afternoon, reports said.

Mr Hanouna had posed online as a bisexual man called
 Jean- José who was "very sporty and well endowed" and "liked being insulted", Ouest France newspaper reported .

He engaged in suggestive chat with the men who 
responded as guests, a studio audience and more than a million viewers watched.

Nicolas Noguier of Le Refuge, an association that works
 with young victims of homophobia, wrote on Facebook that one hotline operator had spent most of the night talking to one of the men Mr Hanouna deceived.

"We were devastated by his tears and his fear of being 
found out by his parents and those around him," Mr Noguier said.

Joël Deumier, president of SOS Homophobie said the segment was "scandalous, shameful and homophobic".

"When you let people get away with behaviour like this, 
you trivialise homophobic discourse. The sketch was deeply
homophobic," he said, quoted by the Gay Times.

Mr Hanouna said on Friday that he felt "hurt" by allegations 
of homophobia and said it was "everything he had been fighting against for years and the opposite of TPMP".

The presenter had also used a photo of YouTube star Max
Emerson's torso for the profile picture without permission,
 the Gay Times reported. Mr Emerson has spoken out on social media, saying he hopes Mr Hanouna "learns a lesson".

Mr Hanouna's show has been the subject of complaints
 about sexism and homophobia before.

In October a male guest on his show kissed a female 
guest on her breast after she rebuffed his requests for a kiss.

That prompted more than 250 people, including then 
women's right a minister Laurence Rossignol, to complain 
to the regulator.

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