The host and culinary author, Julie Andrieu, has educational principles and she sticks to them. Mother of two children, she refuses (for now) to give in on the cell phone…
Host Julie Andrieu, at the head of the show Julie’s notebooksdivides his time between the small screen, cooking and his family life. The mother of two children, Hadrien (13 years old) and Gaïa (9 years old) recently opened up about their education. And it goes straight!
Julie Andrieu does not want her son to be “ostracized” : at what age will he have a phone?
Julie Andrieu, who today lives between Rome and Paris, took the time to play the promotional game on the occasion of the release of her latest book, Julie cooks Italian. Interviewed on video by the media’s Instagram page Lou, the mother notably made a confession about a principle of education with which she is very strict: at home, no cell phones for the children!
“I manage with one principle, it’s no phone! And that’s not easy to maintain”declared the 52-year-old host, married to media neurosurgeon Stéphane Delajoux.“With my son, we decided together that he would have one at 14. He is the only one in his class obviously. But I don’t want him to really be ostracized, to be ostracized because of that”she continued.
Julie Andrieu proud of her family: “I have children who are very curious, very open”
“And yet, there are screens at home, like everywhere. My computer is available, my son has a computer with which he works because we can no longer work today at college without it. So he has access, limited obviously”added the presenter, who keeps her feet on the ground to the point, for example, of refusing large sums of money for advertising.
Convinced that this decision is the right one for her children, Julie Andrieu added: “But on the other hand, there is not this constant solicitation of the telephone. And that changes their perspective on the world.” And it’s up to her to conclude, particularly proud of her offspring: “I have children who are very curious, very open, who also have a capacity for attention. As long as it lasts!”









