Remi Chauveau Notes
A circle of creators share laughter, vulnerability, and mind‑blowing anecdotes in a warm reset of friendship that reveals how human connection quietly powers the entire show.
entertainment 🎯

🤹‍♀️ Cyprien and Fanny La Panny Reveal Their Hidden Talents in a Joyful Episode of Un Bon Moment [ S5‑E18 ] 🎤📚🎨🇯🇵

12 February 2026
@monaguba_ rapper devant @LaPanny & Cyprien quelle folieeeeee merci @Kyan 🫶🏻 #fyp #foryoupage #pourtoi #pt #foryou ♬ original sound - mona guba

🌙 When Devotion Meets Laughter: The Ta Key Moment

In the soft undercurrent of this episode’s chaotic friendship, Ta Key by Shervin Hajipour becomes the emotional echo that binds everything together — a song of lifelong devotion, whispered promises, and the quiet courage of staying. Hajipour, whose voice carries both the tenderness of Persian poetry and the weight of lived experience, sings of love that endures through time, memory, and fragility. And suddenly, the episode’s warmth makes sense: Fanny’s leap of faith, Cyprien’s creative evolution, Mona Guba’s vulnerable freestyle, the playful chaos, the Warm Reset that happens before the cameras roll — all of it mirrors the song’s heartbeat. Ta Key becomes the soundtrack of this article because it captures what the show reveals beneath the jokes: that friendship, like love, is a place where we grow old together in laughter, in doubt, in stories, in sincerity. It is the invisible thread running through the room, the same thread Hajipour pulls when he sings of staying “until the end,” reminding us that even in a comedy show, the most powerful moments are the human ones.

🎶 🌊 🌿 ✨ 🎙️ 💬 🫶 🎧 🌀 📚 🐟 🫒 🕊️ 🔊 Ta Key - Shervin Hajipour




« دوستی آینه‌ای‌ست که در آن، جانِ ما روشن‌تر می‌شود. » — Sohrab Sepehri “Friendship is a mirror in which our soul becomes clearer.”

Friendship, in Sepehri’s vision, is not simply a bond — it is a reflective space, a place where we see ourselves more truthfully because someone else is there to witness us. This episode of Un Bon Moment unfolds exactly in that spirit. What begins as playful chaos slowly reveals something deeper: a circle of creators who, by laughing together, teasing each other, and sharing their doubts, allow their inner worlds to become brighter. The humour becomes a gateway, the anecdotes a form of honesty, and the collective energy a reminder that intimacy often hides inside the most spontaneous moments. From the first seconds, the show feels like stepping into a room where everyone already knows each other — or wants to. The jokes bounce, the rhythm is loose, and the atmosphere is unmistakably warm. But beneath the surface, something more meaningful is happening: a portrait of friendship as Sepehri imagined it, where each voice helps the others shine a little clearer.

🌟 Opening: A Burst of Chaotic Camaraderie

The episode begins in pure Un Bon Moment fashion: playful chaos, sponsor jokes, and affectionate teasing bouncing from one voice to another. Kyan and Navo welcome Cyprien and Fanny La Panny with the kind of humour that instantly creates a shared space. The room feels alive, improvised, and warm — the kind of atmosphere where everyone talks over each other because they’re already laughing.

💛 Fanny’s Leap of Faith

Very early on, Fanny shares her journey from working in a Montmartre shop to receiving her first social‑media contract. Her story is funny, humble, and unexpectedly emotional, especially when she recalls her father’s words: “Fais pas la même erreur, lance‑toi.” That moment of sincerity cuts through the humour, revealing the courage behind her creative path and the tenderness of her family bond.

🎌 Cyprien’s Japan: Curiosity, Culture & Comedy

The conversation shifts to Cyprien’s upcoming book Le Pire Guide du Japon, sparking a cascade of jokes about Japanese pronunciation — “Appleu”, “Samsonito”, “Louis Biton”. The group riffs effortlessly, turning linguistic quirks into comedy gold. Beneath the laughter, there’s a genuine fascination for cultural differences and a shared joy in storytelling.

🎭 Ambition, Identity & The Art of Reinvention

Mid‑episode, the tone softens. The four creators open up about self‑doubt, artistic ambition, and the strange journey of building an identity online. Fanny demonstrates her acting range on the spot, switching emotions like a pro, while Cyprien reflects on evolving from early YouTube sketches to more mature projects. It’s a rare moment of vulnerability — honest, relatable, and deeply human.

🎤 Mona Guba’s Electrifying Freestyle

Then comes the emotional peak: Mona Guba enters and delivers a freestyle that blends admiration, humour, and razor‑sharp writing. She references the guests directly — “J’ai envie de les toucher, pas envie de me rater” — and the room falls silent, visibly moved. Her performance becomes a turning point, reminding everyone that creativity can be both playful and profoundly intimate.

🎲 Games, Improvisation & Collective Joy

The second half explodes again into laughter with Greg Romano’s “Deviner Chanté”. His sung riddles, theatrical delivery, and the group’s chaotic attempts to guess — from superheroes to animals — create a finale full of shared joy. The chameau/dromadaire confusion, the Vision riddle, the collective silliness… it all becomes a celebration of friendship in motion.

❤️ Why We Love This Kind of Show

Because it feels like a safe place — a room where humour and sincerity coexist. Because the friendship is real, the intimacy unforced, the anecdotes both ridiculous and mind‑blowing. Because it reminds us that behind creators, there are humans who doubt, dream, laugh, and lift each other up. A good, sincere show is one where we feel invited into the circle — and Un Bon Moment does exactly that.

#Friendship ✨ #SafePlace 🤝 #CreativeChaos 🎙️ #MindblowingAnecdotes 🤯 #GoodVibesOnly 🌿

Human Moment

The Trust Engine Ritual: The Unseen Human Reset
There’s a moment that happens before every recording of Un Bon Moment — a moment the audience never sees, but that shapes the entire energy of the episode. When the guests arrive, Kyan and Navo don’t jump straight into prep or technical notes. Instead, they spend a few minutes doing something deceptively simple: they ask the guests how they’re really doing. Not the polite “ça va ?” But the real one — the one that makes people pause, breathe, and answer honestly. And here’s the mind‑blowing part: that tiny ritual is the secret engine of the show. It’s why guests open up. It’s why the humour feels safe. It’s why vulnerability appears out of nowhere. It’s why the room becomes a playground instead of a stage. By the time cameras roll, everyone has already been seen, heard, and welcomed as a human being — not as a persona. That’s why the laughter hits deeper, the anecdotes get wilder, and the emotional moments land without warning. The show feels improvised, but the trust is intentional. This is the invisible architecture of Un Bon Moment: a few minutes of sincerity that unlock an hour of chaos, intimacy, and unforgettable stories.

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