cyril hanouna

Cyril Hanouna is a prominent French television and radio host, known for his high-energy style and long-running show Touche pas à mon poste! (TPMP). He's built a massive following through provocative debates, celebrity gossip, and unfiltered commentary on current events.
Quick Biography
Born on September 23, 1974, in Paris to a Tunisian Jewish family, Cyril Valéry Isaac Hanouna started his career in the late 1990s writing for TV trailers on Comédie! and scripting the series Sur la vie d'ma mère for France 2. He broke into hosting with La Grosse Émission alongside Kad Merad and Olivier Berruyer in 2002, then helmed Morning Live on M6 in 2003. His one-man show Cyril Hanouna est une ordure at Théâtre Trévise that year launched his comedic persona, blending humor with boundary-pushing antics.
By the mid-2000s, he was a radio staple on NRJ and Fun Radio with Arthur, while founding production companies like H2O Productions (2010) with Yannick Bolloré and later Baba Funny League. These ventures fueled his empire, including internet game shows via Click and Game Entertainment. In May 2025, he launched his communications agency "Chapchak," signaling a pivot amid TV turbulence.
Rise of TPMP and C8 Era
Hanouna's star exploded in 2012 with Touche pas à mon poste! on D8 (later C8), averaging millions of viewers nightly through zany segments, audience giveaways, and culture war clashes. Highlights include the 2016 "Les 35 heures de Baba," a record-breaking 35-hour live marathon raising funds for charity. The show became a cultural juggernaut, blending trash TV with political hot takes—think heated exchanges on yellow vests (2019) or antisemitism marches (2023).
Yet, it courted endless controversy. Regulators fined C8 repeatedly for off- color content, culminating in the channel's 2025 closure under pressure, which Hanouna framed as censorship silencing jobs for his team. As of early 2026, he's teasing a new TV venture after "leaks" about its name surfaced, vowing resilience: "They wanted to gag me, but they've only put dozens out of work."
Controversies and Public Image
Hanouna thrives on polarization. A 2017 "prank" on TPMP—where he lured gay men with fake ads then ignored their signals—sparked homophobia accusations, record CSA complaints, and sponsor pullouts. Reddit forums lit up with outrage: "If he doesn't get roasted... hope Max Emerson goes at him. Cretin." Critics call him "incontrôlable" (uncontrollable), as seen in a 2024 clip where a deputy grilled ex-C8 boss Ara Aprikian on reining him in.
Supporters see a free-speech warrior railing against "elites." He joined Paris's 2023 anti-antisemitism march post-Gaza war and pitched a 2019 show co- hosted by politicians to tackle "everyday concerns." Detractors, including politicians, decry his influence on youth. Multi-viewpoint snapshot:
Perspective| Key View| Example
---|---|---
Fans| Entertaining provocateur| "Baba" charity marathons, viral moments 1
Critics| Reckless agitator| Homophobia scandal, regulatory fines 4
Industry| Savvy mogul| Production firms, agency launch 35
Media Watchers| Polarizing force| Forum rants on Reddit, deputy clashes 46
Latest Buzz (Feb 2026)
Post-C8 fallout, Hanouna's X account (@Cyrilhanouna) buzzes with teasers for his next show, amid rumors of Europe 1 radio gigs and film cameos (Ténor 2022, Les SEGPA producer). Trending forums speculate on his "bâillonné" (gagged) narrative vs. fresh starts—no confirmed TPMP revival yet, but leaks hint at imminent announcements. Public sentiment splits: gossip sites hype his comeback story, while detractors eye Arcom scrutiny. Imagine the scene—Hanouna, mic in hand, turning unemployment into a rally cry, much like his marathon stunts of old.
TL;DR : Cyril Hanouna, France's love-him-or-hate-him TV titan, evolved from radio sidekick to TPMP emperor, now plotting post-2025 bans with agencies and mystery shows—controversies included.
Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.