The news shocked the world of television on March 25. The lifeless body of Loana, the first winner of “Loft Story,” was found in her apartment in Nice. At that precise moment, Cyril Hanouna interrupted his show to announce this national tragedy. Magloire, who was present on the set that night, could not hide his deep emotion. Over a month after her disappearance, he now offers a deeper analysis of the tragic path of the person he knew.
“I will not add to the thousands of posthumous friends”: Magloire denounces posthumous friendships Magloire does not want to join the sudden wave of sympathy surrounding the star since her death. “I will not add to the thousands of posthumous friends that Loana has discovered posthumously,” he explains frankly. The comedian prefers to highlight the chance he had to truly support her in difficult times. “I had the chance to accompany her from time to time,” he points out. For him, decency should take precedence over the immediate exploitation that often follows the death of a popular personality.
The former host recalls the phenomenal impact caused by the young woman when she came out of the Loft in 2001. He mentions that she “moved as many people on the Champs-Élysées as a World Cup can.” According to him, this excessive fervor was the starting point of a destructive spiral. He regrets that this fleeting celebrity was the result of a time when “everything was crazy, poorly controlled.”
“We are all guilty of this terrible decline”: Magloire warns of an ignored loneliness In an interview reported by “Télé 7 Jours,” Magloire does not hesitate to use harsh words to describe this tragic ending. “I think we are all guilty of this terrible decline,” he asserts with deep conviction. This statement aims to highlight the passivity of society and the media in the face of the former star’s downward spiral. For him, the public and the industry have had short memories while the star “is certainly one of its first victims.”
This unyielding analysis sheds light on the loneliness of Loana despite her historical notoriety. Magloire believes that collective indifference was the worst poison for someone who gave so much on the small screen. By denouncing this shared responsibility, he hopes that this tragedy will finally serve as a lesson for the future. His testimony remains one of the most insightful since the star’s disappearance, reminding us that behind the media image was “a woman crushed by a completely insane machine.”





