Özcan Akyol surprises Glennis Grace: ‘Strange woman’

After her interview in the talk show Jinek, Özcan Akyol strongly suspects that Glennis Grace is a ‘strange woman’. The TV presenter indicates this in his section in the VARA guide.

© RTL, SBS

The interview of Glennis Grace in the talk show of Eva Jinek has raised many eyebrows. Especially her curious smiles at the strangest moments make people doubt whether she really regrets her supermarket terrorism. How exactly does Özcan Akyol look at this?

strange woman

Özcan gives his opinion about Glennis in the VARA guide. “That’s a strange woman. I think she once came in eighth in an American talent show and has been imitating Whitney Houston all her life. In the Netherlands you can force an interview on prime time television with those feats of arms.”

Unbelievable, Özcan thinks. “I mainly want to say: we live in an incredibly undersized country when it comes to music. I think she has come to believe in her own fame as well.”

Queen Batta

Glenda Batta, as Glennis is really called, is way beyond her shoes, according to Özcan. “She sat there as if she were our queen. What amused me the most was that lawyer, in the front row, who visibly cheered afterwards.”

Ozcan is referring to Kerem Canatan. “What a bungler. Then you are really not suitable for your profession if you approve that performance.”

Criticism of Eva

Incidentally, last night in the talk show ‘Renze op Saturday’, Eva Jinek was criticized for her relatively mild interview with Glennis. “I think she should have been dealt with a little harder,” said living legend Catherine Keyl.

She continues: “I think that someone who happens to be a good singer cannot derive the right to beat up supermarket staff. It’s a bit difficult for people to become famous Dutch people and to derive rights from that that other people don’t have. I think that is totally wrong.”

‘Not too bad’

We should not exaggerate Glennis’s misconduct, says host Renze Klamer. “That is true, while I also sometimes think: worse things have happened in the history of artists.”

ttn-48