Is this the Czech youth? Prostitution, drugs, booze and rape. Its participants will be ashamed of Prague – day & night
Yes Yes. He plays the oldest participant in the colorful apartment, “Joe”. DJ Uwa, known for his close friendship with Ivan Jonák, the owner of Discoland Sylvie and the typhoon of the nineties. In one of the parts, when it starts to fight in the club, Joe makes a threat to the boy along the lines of: “I’ll see you here one more time, so I’ll put you in the trunk and you’ll go East.” It should be mentioned that the participants do not receive a script, so they come up with all the dialogues themselves on the set. Hell, you can’t erase the nineties from your heart…
It’s all so weak, stupid and basic that the audience is embarrassed just to watch it. Perhaps the best of the entire project is the Old Man with the rat Tříska, played by Kristián Soukup. Karlos, the playboy of the whole project, which would have been about he broke one heart, he’s a guy who fell into gambling, he owes where he can, and he still doesn’t hesitate to rape a woman.
Matej Quittwho plays Karlos in the reality show, placed 4th in the Man of the Year competition in 2004. Dominic Chabr, who plays the manager of the cafe, again won bronze last year. So Nova bet on hot guys, but even that didn’t save the show.
As if they were encouraging young ladies to striptease
Míša, portrayed by Vindy Krejčí, did not catch on as an actress in Prague, then she accidentally fell into Karlos’s bed, to which his girlfriend at the time Sofi admitted, she arranged mass kicking Míša out of the apartment, she didn’t hesitate, she moved in with Karlos, where his former offer to dance half-naked in the club, and Karlos even tried to rape her.
Sárka, played by the beautiful Aneta Drobná, who plays Karlos’ housekeeper, but she doesn’t throw away even then. God knows why. Míše keeps repeating that it’s hard to succeed in Prague, and it kind of gives the impression that when a girl comes to Prague, she has to marry someone more famous or do a striptease in a bar first. “Succeeding in Prague is difficult, of course you want to make a living, but it takes time,” says Šárka Míše. What will today’s ladies take from it?
When did Marek fall in love with Leyla?
It was supposed to be the hottest bunch in town, but it’s more of a bunch of wretches, there’s hardly anyone there who’s made it in life. And it’s definitely not the case that “everyone has their own problems”. Tady it’s one disaster after another. Scared Anya someone always moralizes Sophie no one has ever said she can’t sing so she runs into every producer who drags her into bed and Olda he can’t even keep a rat in a cage, let alone a job. Still, there is never a shortage of money for a party.
The youngest, Julie, moved into the apartment without asking, shares it with her new one on a stranger’s bed and is forever yelling at everyone that they are stupid. Leyla is so bored every morning that you’d rather spit coffee in her face, and Marek is kind of on the sidelines of it all and makes it seem like he’s there by mistake. How he got together with Leyla and where the great love arose, perhaps no one understands.
All in all…
So it looks like the show is delivering the following message to the youngest generation:
- work, there will always be a party.
- You have to date mainly those who are mean to you, don’t love you, humiliate you and after a few drinks they behave aggressively.
- Sleeping with someone to get your job is normal.
- When you move to Prague, go striptease first, everyone does it.
- having no cash reserve in your account, being penniless is cool.
- Sleeping with a random stranger from a bar in your roommate’s bed is perfectly fine.
- Robbing your roommates for money and buying clothes with it is super fun.
- When two women live in the same household with a man who tried to rape one of them, physically threatens and insults her, it’s great company.
- And finally. When you’re 51 and bored, move a couple of 20-year-olds into your apartment to liven it up a bit. And then tolerate them barking at each other like in kindergarten.
Who invented this…
Maybe it’s all a recession and not the image of the young generation that television wanted to convey with this project. Because it’s not just that they mainly live on social networks people around 15 who see themselves in the individual protagonists and they want to be like them, even an adult knows that if he wants to move to a foreign city, he doesn’t have to immediately put on a thong and go dance the rent…
Under the hottest crowd in the city, one would imagine a group of young people traveling together in the summer, looking for the most beautiful sunset, sleeping under the open sky where they have a great drink or whatever…. Anything for God’s sake that doesn’t involve drugs, drunkenness, money-stealing, rape, or constant insults. And if one day these main characters are not ashamed of participating in such a project, then the world is probably completely upside down.
Source: TV NOVA, Instagram, reality show Prague – day & night
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