René van der Gijp is disappointed in the new column by Angela de Jong. He finds her pieces boring now that she no longer writes about television. “No, I don’t like it. Yes, a shame,” said the VI-star.

© SBS, RTL

As a TV columnist, Angela de Jong was one of the most controversial media personnel in the country, but that has now changed considerably. She writes a column about Ditjes and Datjes, which led us to tell her about children’s treats and drop laces last week in the Humberto Tan talk show. In other words: no urgency at all.

‘Yes, sin’

Wilfred Genee is not really enthusiastic. “What do you think of Angela de Jong and her new column, René, so far?” He asks in Today Inside.

Colleague René van der Gijp: “No, I don’t like it.”

Wilfred: “A shame actually.”

René: “Yes, sin.”

Oh my God

Wilfred thinks Angela has killed something unique. “It was always a party to read, huh, Angela?”

René: “Yes, it was also a kind of … It also keeps a lot of people busy. Football keeps a lot of people busy, TV keeps many people busy, but how she deals with her children and raises her children, nobody keeps it busy.”

Wilfred: “Have you seen that at RTL Tonight, where she was sitting this week? If you are watching that, you think: O my God.”

Table guest Valentijn Driessen: “Babble.”

“Give a chance!”

Johan Derksen is nuanced. “You have to give her the chance. She has written about TV for fifteen years and that means watching an evening of TV and then you make a piece about it. But now she has to come up with perspectives, come up with topics, and she does not yet have the flair to paint the politicians in the same way as the TV heroes.”

Valentijn: “But then she has to start with those politicians, but not all that kind of chatter.”

“You are mild!”

Johan thinks it’s a matter of time. “She has the gift to be able to write a nice column and I think we should be patient. You just have to adjust that adjustment …”

Wilfred: “What mild are you for Angela today.”

Johan: “My wife reads his faith, because she is a fan of her, but he says,” The strange thing is that it is only about Angela at the moment. It is me, me, me. ” It used to be about the people on TV. “

Push message

Valentine finds it one big disappointment. “I get such a push message every day and I was also very curious, because as a TV columnist she was great. The urgency is just missing.”

Finally, René: “TV also keeps people busy. If you write a column about table tennis, nobody reads it either.”

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