René van der Gijp continues to go against Wierd Duk. The VI-star seems to have forced that he no longer has to sit next to the Telegraaf journalist. “He has a Messiah complex.”

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The free Wednesday of René van der Gijp yielded a large point of contents this summer behind the scenes of today Inside. Johan Derksen wanted Wierd Duk to become his regular Wednesday substitute, but according to Wilfred Genee it will be too serious: someone with a larger sympathetic factor on René’s site.

René refuses Wierd

Wilfred likes to see Wierd in René, because it would be a bit more balanced: the Telegraaf journalist is in terms of subjects that are heavily on the hand, while René is feather. However, in the summer, the brilled VI-star indicated that he would not want to sit next to Wierd, but he has tried that in recent weeks. And apparently he didn’t like it.

After having joined René a few times, we see Wierd appear tonight on the Gijp-Loze Wednesday, next to Thomas van Groningen. What is going on is unclear, but René picked up last night Today Inside In any case, firmly out to the conservative opinion maker. He blames the Messiah complex.

Polarizing on X

Wierd is discussed when it comes to X, where there is hefty polarization, according to the VI men. “That is what Duk has: he has to throw tweets out,” notes Johan Derksen.

Table guest Job Knoester: “Well, I went to have a look at Wierd Duk last week. Then he would have been here last week and I get a tweet every time he does and they kept coming in.”

Wilfred Genee: “Yes, but he doesn’t recognize himself at all. I say:” Yes, but you are also participating. You polarize too. You also push people into a corner, but he doesn’t think that is a bit of a keys, but they just keep on making them everywhere. On the toilet, in bed. “

Bin

René van der Gijp believes that Wierd is exaggerating the state of the country. “Do you have the idea that the Netherlands is completely upside down? If you are with football and things like that? That it is totally wrong? I don’t experience that.”

Johan: “I don’t know if you’ll be in the Netherlands that is upside down. I am glad that after fifty years I am finished from the Randstad, because that is reasonably upside down. Take a look in Rotterdam-Zuid, that’s an old-fashioned ghetto, isn’t it?”

René: “I think the large garbage bin is X, I am really convinced of that.”

Movie stars world

Johan thinks Wierd is in the mud with his legs. “René, it is really that way: there are few journalists in the Netherlands in the extreme currents within society as Wierd Duk. He is really on top of that. That escapes us in our pseudo-film star world.”

He continues: “We have much less worries, but I think that man follows all currents in the Netherlands very well and also makes very fascinating stories about it.”

Wilfred: “Yes, but he will be able to do a little less here and there, if I read it that way.”

Messiah complex

René thinks that Wierd started to believe too much in himself. “Wierd does have a bit of greatness madness if you think you are the Messiah. That you think you are the one in the Netherlands who should do it. Then you have a Messiah complex that I think: I have to laugh about it rather than taking it seriously.

Johan: “Yes, but Wierd is a serious journalist, isn’t it?”

René: “Yes, I know, but he thinks he is the one who has to do it here.”

Johan: “Yes, but he sees that as a duty and that is also the duty of the journalist in him.”

No in favor

René then points to the murder of the American conservative activist Charlie Kirk. “It’s a bit like that boy who died in America, you know, he sees himself a bit, from: I was put here to resolve things.”

Johan: “He is extremely suitable because he has a lot of knowledge and very wide. You are not so in favor of it. I think he is the ideal talk show guest.”

No self -mockery

René thinks differently. “I find someone who takes too serious at all, but doesn’t take a little serious, hey, Johan, but takes too seriously, without any self -mockery …”

Johan: “I don’t think Wierd takes himself too seriously. I think it’s a very pleasant man too.”

René concludes: “Without any self -mockery.”

How does Wierd look at this itself? After the persistent bash of René, Wilfred must of course ask him tonight in VI. One thing seems certain: we only see Wierd for the time being on the Gijp-free Wednesday.

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