A comedian said Wednesday, January 6 that one of his sketches alluding to billionaire Vincent Bolloré on Comédie + was censored, a month after the dismissal of host Sébastien Thoen for a parody of CNews, another channel of the Canal + group.
To read also: Stéphane Guy dismissed: a sling coming to Canal +?
The sketch which was to be broadcast on Comédie + on Monday, and in which the comedian Edgar-Yves drew a parallel between the industrialist who controls Vivendi, the group's parent company, and the Guinean president Alpha Condé, has been deleted, reports
Le World
.
"I was simply censored because I referred to Vincent Bolloré," said Edgar-Yves, interviewed Wednesday by AFP.
Asked by
Le Monde
, the producer of the show Arnaud Chautard said that
"the sketch was cut at the request of the artist, who was not happy with his performance
.
"
To read also: "We are all Stéphane Guy": the sports editorial staff manifest in silence in front of Canal +
"I do not confirm the version of Mr. Arnaud Chautard affirming that I would have asked to be cut because I was not satisfied with my service"
, replied Edgar-Yves, who will comment in more detail on the case during his show at the Théâtre de la République when theaters reopen.
This case arises after the dismissal on December 24 of commentator Stéphane Guy, 23 years of house at Canal and flagship voice of French football, for having supported the comedian Sébastien Thoen, himself fired in early December for a parody targeting CNews , the group's info channel.