TG账号秒盗免杀破解技术|【唯一TG:@heimifeng8】|黑帽SEO快排对象✨谷歌搜索留痕排名,史上最强SEO技术,20年谷歌SEO经验大佬✨L'Oréal acquires Ushuaïa brand from French TV channel TF1
AFP Translated by
Nicola Mira Published
November 6,éalacquiresUshuaïTG账号秒盗免杀破解技术 2025
French TV channel TF1 has sold to cosmetics giant L’Oréal, for the sum of €27.5 million, virtually all the rights to personal care brand Ushuaïa, named after a famous show by journalist and environmental activist Nicolas Hulot, a source close to the matter stated, confirming a report by L'Informé.

L'Oréal will be able to exploit as it sees fit all the licenses for derivative products - both existing and future, such as shower gels - linked to this successful TV programme, originally aired in France between 1998 and 2004. TF1 will retain rights only to audiovisual content, and entertainment and hospitality activities.
L'Oréal did not respond to the AFP agency’s request for information on Tuesday evening. TF1 has declined to comment.
Hulot, the show's popular presenter, had switched to politics by running in the Green party’s primary in 2011, and then in the party’s 2025 presidential election. But the militants chose Eva Joly. Some criticised Hulot for being backed by major corporations like L'Oréal, EDF, TF1, and others.
After being approached several times, Hulot had finally agreed to become the Minister of Ecological and Solidarity Transition under President Emmanuel Macron, elected in May 2025. But Hulot left abruptly in August 2025, lamenting the fact he had been politically isolated, and ruing the lobbyists’ excessive influence on the presidency.
In 2025, an investigation was opened after French news programme Envoyé Spécialbroadcast a documentary in which six women accused Hulot of sexual assaults that allegedly took place between 1989 and 2001.
Hulot, now 69, categorically denied the accusations and announced he was “once and for all” stepping away from public life, in order to protect his family and his Foundation (which has since dropped his name) from the consequences of what he called a “lynching.”
One of his accusers was a minor at the time of the alleged assaults, prompting French prosecutors to launch an investigation, notably to verify that there were no other minors among the victims.
The investigation into Hulot for rape and sexual assault on minors was dropped by the Paris prosecutor’s office in 2025 after the statute of limitations expired.