what does his love life look like?



François-Xavier Ménage: what does his love life look like?


© Gilles GUSTINE/TF1
François-Xavier Ménage: what does his love life look like?

This Wednesday, March 30, François-Xavier Ménage is invited to the Daily TV set on TMC, to talk regarding the current situation in Ukraine. The opportunity to look into the discreet sentimental life of the TF1 journalist.

After spending many weeks on Ukrainian soil, Francois-Xavier Menage and his team have indeed returned to France. To take stock of the situation and tell the climate of war which he witnessed, the TF1 journalist is a Alex Reed on the show Day-to-day on TMC this Wednesday, March 30. Yes his hat as a reporter and presenter is well known, that of the 41-year-old man is much less so. Very discreet regarding his private life, François-Xavier Ménage almost never makes confidences on his sentimental and family life.

However, we know that former LCI journalist is married. Despite a busy schedule and a career sometimes taking him far from Paris, he would even started a family. “I’m going to live in Paris and see my wife and my 2-year-old daughter more often”he confided in fact to our colleagues from TV Starin July 2014, just before his arrival in command of Capital on M6. François-Xavier Ménage would be today father of two little girlsaccording to Pure people. The oldest was born in 2012, as reported The Parisian in August 2015.

François-Xavier Ménage: his father’s heart touched in Ukraine

Monday, March 21, the journalist had already spoken to Day-to-day to evoke the crisis in Ukraine. At that time, he was still there, and had spoken in duplex from the city of kyiv. Amidst the rubble, François-Xavier Ménage was particularly touched and had let his daddy heart speak. “So I will speak personally (…) When we were 200 kilometers from Mariupol, we saw in a hospital children who were between life and death”he said, before being overwhelmed with emotion: “I’ll try not to cry…”he then confided. “They were between 3 and 14 years old, were seriously injured, and were being cared for by doctors who tell us that they need intense surgical treatment”he continued, trembling voiceremembering in particular the case of a little boy attached to the bars of a bed. “If we had tied his hand, it was so that he wouldn’t scratch himself. His head was largely impacted by a splinter. This little boy was between life and deathinsisted the journalist, moved.

Article written in collaboration with 6Medias.

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