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TV show: Les Bleus and the Elysée, The King’s Man: first mission… what should we watch on TV tonight?

News Les Bleus and the Elysée, action movie The King’s Man: first mission, Capital magazine and comedy Le sens de la fête… Here is the Télé 7 Jours selection prepared by the editorial team for Sunday, November 20, 2022.

Report Blues and Elysee it will follow 20:55 France 5. During the Fifth Republic, football gained so much importance that it became an important political tool for presidents… Since the 1998 World Cup, Elysée has continued to develop relationships with the Blues. This document by Mohamed Bouhafsi, historian of the ca vous, shows the threads of that rapprochement. And a good journalistic shot: Emmanuel Macron comments on a cult photo of him during his Blues victory in 2018.

at 21:10 channel+sets the action movie The King’s Man: First Mission. In June 1914, when Europe was plunged into war, the Duke of Oxford, a convinced pacifist, reactivated his spy network of lackeys, chauffeurs, and servants “because no one paid any attention to them” to break alliances between the Tsar. Nicolas III, Kaizer Wilhelm II and King George V… In this third episode, the same fight: the director has fun with History (Rasputin has superpowers!), arranges a fun action soundtrack – harsh humor and gravity defying. invoking death and the terror of the trenches. Very good nostalgia with a very inspiring Ralph Fiennes in the role of Oxford.

M6 Bet on the magazine at 21:10 Capital city. This special Black Friday issue offers research on online sales. Internet orders represent 14% of purchases. 200,000 employees in France are preparing and delivering these orders faster than ever before! Under what conditions do these workers work to keep pace?

We end this selection with comedy. meaning of party at 21:10 TF1. Max plans weddings forever. On his part, he is a tenor. However, lately the virtuoso of the personalized banquet has become tired. Get out of the holy fire that pushes him to surrender. One final high-profile ceremony, a head-slapping groom and the closing of the ban… The Todelano-Nakache duo (Untouchables) draws a delicious choral comedy about cohabitation this time, hilarious but not just. Humor, once again, is a clever key to addressing class relations, revealing mental barriers between individuals, or censuring benevolent disabilities without spoiling the atmosphere.

Sarah Ibri

Source: Programme Television

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