Meis & Thomalla – frivolous spray cream campaign



[ad_1]

On Saturday night, Sylvie Meis and Sophia Thomalla dueled Günther Jauch and Thomas Gottschalk in “Because they don’t know what’s going to happen.” The motto could have been: fun challenges, “but cream please.”

Normally the RTL show is a quota generator, but in recent weeks the “Because they don’t know what’s going on” (DSWNWP) format has been weakening. In it, Barbara Schöneberger acts as presenter and Günther Jauch and his teammate Thomas Gottschalk have to compete in matches against another celebrity couple. Yesterday it was Sophia Thomalla and Sylvie Meis who put on the competition.

In the end, the show reached 1.74 million people watching television. That was at least 70,000 more than the previous week, in which it had hit an all-time low: DSWNWP only reached 1.67 million viewers, and therefore fewer than ever.

Spray cream in your mouth? “We need all the spectators”

So isn’t it a coincidence that Barbara Schöneberger talked about it on the show? “We’re doing it now, we need all the spectators!” Suggested the moderator during a slightly frivolous game.

That happens: In the “Strippenzieher” game, Meis and Thomalla had to pour tea using a string construction or spray cream over muffins. Jauch and Gottschalk were involved and were able to manipulate the ropes in such a way that the task was correspondingly difficult.

In the game, especially Rafael van der Vaart’s ex-wife was notably exhausted, which made Barbara Schöneberger delighted. So delicious that he grabbed a spray can of the cream and popped a portion into his mouth.

But with the load, she apparently hadn’t filled her mouth yet and asked Sophia Thomalla to swallow a dollop of cream. Schöneberger finally commented on the slightly offensive note in this scene with the phrase that “all spectators” are necessary.

Sylvie Meis and Sophia Thomalla lost the round anyway. Like the whole show, because at the end of the show Günther Jauch and Thomas Gottschalk triumphed.

The well-rehearsed team raised € 40,000 and donated the sum to the Haag construction site in Upper Bavaria.

[ad_2]