Bram Moszkowicz thinks it is tasteless that Peter van der Vorst is holding on to the rancid program Ex on the Beach. “There is a limit somewhere that lets you do young people,” he says.

© SBS

Start Loving, Stop Hating, Be Sweet: This RTL campaign has of course proved extremely unbelievable. Being sweet is fun, until you can earn a lot of money with the opposite, it seems a bit. To retain their credibility somewhat, they stopped with Temptation Island, but then Ex on the Beach?

Unstatid

The AD has one large article Written about how good RTL is currently scoring with this rancid program. At the young age of the participants who are literally exposed to the most filthy things, the newspaper points to the young age of the participants. They will never get rid of it again, but they chose that themselves? That is what RTL thinks.

Bram Moszkowicz believes that RTL boss Peter van der Vorst has a responsibility, especially if there are even candidates of 19 years old. “Look, those people are 18-plus and have signed for it. They are fairly young people, but they are of age. You can only wonder if it is chosen as a producer and as a channel to broadcast it.”

Protect

Colleague Dyantha Brooks understands what Bram says. She adds Shownieuws: “Whether you might not have to protect these people against themselves.”

Show connoisseur Eline de Ruig: “Many viewers also respond from: it seems like I’m looking at a p*rnof movie. It is literally s*ks on TV. You notice that viewers are increasingly worried about this program, especially because Peter van der Vorst has spoken about Temptation Island in January and said:” That doesn’t fit anymore. “” “

Not very different

P*RNO with people from 19 years old? Is this what RTL stands for? “It doesn’t seem very different to me, Ex on the Beach?”, Says Dyantha.

Eline: “No, it doesn’t differ that much.”

Story-boss Guido den Attrekker: “It is trade, isn’t it? It is trade for the ruthless TV world, because they just want to make viewing figures and programs that people are talking about. It is on Videoland and you have to subscribe to that, so it is not suddenly you are confronted with that on TV.”

Draw

Bram believes that Peter should consult himself. “I think – but that is my opinion – that as a makers and as a producer and channel too, I think you have to draw a boundary somewhere. You have a certain responsibility and there is a limit somewhere that you have young people do.”

Reporter Thom Goderie: “Because there is all so much commotion now, today they have sent all participants a message that they are not allowed to respond to the media and that all communication continues through the producer, so they also feel that something is going on somewhere.”

Ban on speaking

So a ban on speaking. Dyantha is shocked: “Bram, can you impose that people?”

Well, they don’t do anything else at Talpa. Just ask your own colleague Manuel Venderbos. Bram: “I think there is an agreement that there is a confidentiality over a certain period and I think what happened today, that they are reminded of it for a while.”

Ruthless

In the end, people like Peter are mainly ethical for the stage, Guido then wants to say. “TV producers are really ruthless, let’s be honest. If there is a penny to be earned, they go for it.”

Bram concludes by pointing out that candidates on these types of programs are often not very smart, while someone like Peter is. “I don’t know if they have invented the gunpowder, in the sense whether they can see where they are in ten years. There is a certain responsible for the makers.”

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