Marc van der Linden denies that he has been evicted, but his defense against the juice not from Yvonne Coldeweijer. The royalty connoisseur seems to be quite confused.
The 53-year-old Marc van der Linden has had a great career. At one point he was the authoritative royalty connoisseur of our country, but it is sad to see how everything has collapsed like a house of cards. Fortunately, he is gallantly kept above his head by all his former colleagues in the show media.
Dirt about Marc
Anyone who looks a little further than RTL Boulevard and Shownieuws knows that the dirt about Marc is so extensive that it dwarfs the trainloads of rubbish from Rome. Why isn’t this widely reported? There is a kind of common consensus in the media that Marc is doing so badly that you can’t make it happen.
The explicit films, the mind-boggling screenshots, his night in jail for alleged extortion and his sudden exits at both RTL Boulevard and Weekend say it all. Events followed each other in rapid succession at the beginning of last year. And as icing on the cake, Marc also started to joke about his ‘meeting’ with Queen Elizabeth.
Juice from Yvonne
VIP crusher Yvonne Coldeweijer came over Marc yesterday with brand new juice. She leaked through her juice channel a letter about Marc’s departure from publishing house Audax, where he was editor-in-chief of Royalty magazine. “Now Marc has no work at all. I think he’s really not doing well.”
Yvonne also shares a confused one story with which Marc accidentally makes a private payment request public. He asks someone to transfer 5 euros for ‘T.’ A very stingy tick, of course. “Is this T. short for Tina (drugs)?” the juice queen wonders.
Evicted
A spy from Yvonne then announces that Marc has fallen into disrepair. “I worked for a while at a bailiff’s office and he is deep deep in debt. Has also been evicted from his house.”
Yvonne then: “How bad. What kind of amount should we think about then?”
The spy: “I dare not say the exact amount, but you will not just be kicked out of your house for a few thousand. That usually goes towards the ton or more.”
Mark responds
Marc is now responding to all the commotion. “An internal email from Audax was released today. I have responded to this as follows: “Following the news today, I confirm that, after my cerebral infarction, I am saddened that I am no longer chief editor of Royalty invented by me. am.”
He continues: “From Audax, a company set up by the late Jacques de Leeuw, for which I worked for 34 years, largely as a freelancer, I understand that there will be no successor as editor-in-chief. I will of course remain actively involved with the subject of royalty.”
Confused posts
Marc denies being unemployed. “I have been working with great pleasure for some time now for the weekly magazine Privé and various foreign magazines and newspapers, and I am also working on a (still) secret project for a foreign streaming channel. and, as editor-in-chief, active for a new magazine in which some of Royalty’s employees will also participate.”
The numerous errors in Marc’s messages are striking. Perhaps it is fashion – Tim Hofman, for example, structurally does not use capital letters – but it is more likely that Marc is confused behind his screen. Is there something in the water at Privé? The boss of that magazine was also stunned this week; him with his sudden Peter Gillis hug.
Not out of the house
Finally, Marc denies that he has been evicted, but his defense does not sound very convincing. “And another thing: In principle, I work fully from the house where I have lived for 25 years. I wish Royalty and my former colleagues at Audax every success in the future and I look back with great gratitude on the good years at this company.”
If someone remarks that he finds his dismissal so intense, Marc replies: “Look, new adventure is fun”