Miss France 2025, Angélique Angarni-Filopon, is having a somewhat complicated start to her reign but the pretty young 34-year-old woman has a tough shell. Guest of Léa Salamé, she spoke of her “armored heart”.
This Saturday, January 4, Léa Salamé received Miss France 2025, aka Angélique Angarni-Filopon, on the set of What an era! on France 2. The opportunity to discuss with the beauty queen her age, the competition and online insults…
Miss France 2025 harassed: does she read the comments?
Determined to return to the violent wave of cyberharassment of which she has been the target since her election, which occurred on December 14 under the presidency of the jury led by Sylvie Vartan, the 34-year-old beauty queen did not mince her words. Supported by the entire set, the flight attendant who became Miss France gave her feelings about the hateful comments she receives en masse about her age, her origins, her outspokenness…
While Léa Salamé questioned her about her exact knowledge of said hate messages, Miss Martinique 2024 – supposedly elected thanks to “wokism“according to trolls from the Internet – replied: “Unfortunately, I read them because I want to block them. I no longer want these people to have access to my direct account”. Before deploring: “Unfortunately, what people don’t realize is that behind me, I have a family and I have nephews who come across the comments…”
Miss France 2025 “armored” but worried about her family
“I armor myself. In the West Indies they say ‘my heart is armored’. But my nephews are perhaps not necessarily so”continued Angélique Angarni-Filopon on France 2. Before completing: “I find it sad to just take so much comfort in telling someone that you don’t like them (…) time too. I would never say to someone in the street ‘I don’t like not your hat'”. And the one who made her acting debut in Household Scenes to conclude clearly: “It’s a bit cowardly all the same, it’s a shame (…) The Misses are expensive all the same”.
Since the start of this wave of massive harassment, the current Miss can count on the support of the Miss France Society, represented by its president, Frédéric Gilbert, who “strongly condemned” the insulting and racist remarks made towards him. “These offensive comments have no place in our competition, any more than in our society, and will all be reported to the competent authorities (…) Harassment and cyberharassment are punishable by law”he said on social networks.