Yannis Butos: “I spent a time I was not well psychologically, it is not easy to manage it”

“TV is a steady job, steady money and all of a sudden they took it away from me,” reveals .In his television abstinence and how much this personally cost him, among many others, Giannis Butos in the new interview he gave Friday morning on the camera of the Breakfast@star show and journalist Elias Skoulas. TRANSPARENCY “It is not my choice to opt for television abstention. While at first it had taken me a lot from below, then I ran through my platforms to make my own content and I’ve seen that it benefits me because there are ads and sponsors. Thank God I’m doing well. I was sad to be out of television, but there’s nothing I can do. I will not sit and cry,” he first pointed out the young model. “When you’re at the beginning of 23 and you feel like you’ve been on a road, what’s being built and that suddenly you’re cut off, it’s not easy to manage it and I’ve spent a time I wasn’t well psychologically. It’s a steady job, steady money and all of a sudden they took it away from me,” he added. “I don’t know if I was wrong on my part. I’m definitely very young in this place and I had a lot to learn. I would make mistakes like everyone else, but I think it was more about management and budget than anything else. I think for infinite panels, it was too strong. I think television is aimed at people who have spontaneity and give something to the viewers. I consider myself in this conspiracy, but it’s no coincidence that people no longer see television because if you ask me we always see the same people. Not everyone is pleasant in the world and they think the world chooses them, but it doesn’t choose them. There are other reasons. The world needs something new, but it’s not up to us. Usually when new blood comes in, everyone runs to eliminate it,” John Butos also filled in on the STAR breakfast.