Harry Mens seems to believe the gossip about the alleged cheating of Wilfred Genee. The Business Class star, himself experience expert, responds significantly: “He has healthy hormones.”
There are really rumors about alleged adultery by Wilfred Genee for a long time, and almost all of them come from the gossip show of his teasing spirit Dennis Schouten. The newest gossip about Wilfred is much discussed, because a photo of it has also been leaked: he went into the pub with their former Nanny after his birthday party.
Unpredictable
Wilfred responds to it and his wife Lili has given a long interview about it in which she trivializes the pub date. What does Harry Mens think, who maintains a warm bond with the VI-star, of it?
The Business Class star says in the New Revu: “Wilfred is sometimes a guest in my program. I think he is a suitable guest, because he is unpredictable and yet fun. That boy is busy with a lot of things at the same time, which I admire him, but whether it is all good for him, that is very question. He is very driven.”
Old babysitter
Harry says unwise. “He is also a day older, so I would almost say: take it a bit easier. That there are noises that his private life suffers, I think that is not too bad.”
“Recently on his birthday he was spotted with a lady, that was his old babysitter, I think nothing special. Or I don’t think he’s cheating? He has healthy hormones, just like every guy.”
‘Don’t bother me’
Does Harry think Wilfred is double -hearted? “That he is sometimes a guest with me, but at the same time makes me ridiculous in VI? That doesn’t bother me. I think that’s fine, dude. I don’t care about that program, because the caravan pulls on and you will never hear from it again. It is also a kind for what hears what.”
“With his busy schedule, he takes the trouble to sit in my program, then he can also make a joke about me. On the other hand, he does not want to hear any bad word about John de Mol, with whom he is in the inner bag. In that respect he is a home whistler. He must have it from John de Mol, so he protects him, in that respect, is not strange.”

