“If man feels that way, this must follow,” said the man about the saliva created after his recent performance. Position in the satire made by Markos Seferlis in Nemo through the performance at Delphinario took Lakis Lazopoulos this morning (16.09.2024) when he met Faye Skorda on the set of the new Buongiorno on the Grand Canal. “The commentary is free for everyone and for Seferlis, it cannot be banned. But the subject of life is free for everyone. Because there are some people in life who decide that “we will make the life we want and others will ask us what life they will do.” One can’t make life and ask me or you. We will each make the life that we want, because we are not what we are born but what we feel,” the popular artist originally said. “It’s true what we feel, as the Assistant says. If man feels that way, that must follow. From then on, by commenting on it, I’m fine. Everyone has a commentary depending on their level, their thinking, their experiences, the way they’ve grown and many things. It doesn’t mean that, just because everyone’s commenting in time or timelessly, it’s something. I mean, commentary may not be good, for many it isn’t, it’s not forbidden to comment, but it’s actually the time that transcends some commentary. I don’t think Seferlis is out of date, but I think that sometimes commenting on a new way of life that comes… You can enter in another way but everyone does it by their own means,” added Lakis Lazopoulos. See the screenshot from 05.70: It is recalled that right after Mark Seferlis’ sketch played by non-binary Nemo, this year’s winner of Eurovision, and not only, who spoke of racism and homophobia.
Lakis Lazopoulos for Marco Seferlis: “The era surpasses some commentary”
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in Lifestyle