Louise Sigouin animates Mexico reunion for Si on s’aimait encore
Louise Sigouin was in Mexico for the final week of Si on s’aimait encore, where she led workshops during a reunion built around seven of the eight couples from seasons 2 and 3. For the specialist in relational support, the setting turned a closing week into a live exercise in emotional disclosure.
Mexico and seven couples
The production gathered seven of the eight couples from seasons 2 and 3 in Mexico as the adventure officially ended. That format gave Sigouin a different kind of on-camera role: not just observing the exchanges, but animating several workshops meant to open people up emotionally.
“Ma présence au Mexique prenait tout son sens grâce à mes ateliers, qui portaient un mandat clair: renforcer l’autonomie affective des participants et celle des téléspectateurs, et c’est avec beaucoup de joie que j’ai accepté cette invitation.”
Autonomy behind the workshops
Sigouin said those workshops had a clear mandate to strengthen the participants’ and viewers’ emotional autonomy. In practical terms, that means the Mexico week was designed as more than a reunion segment: it was built to push the participants toward more direct language about what they felt and needed.
Jocelyn and Denise did not take part in the reunions after their separation, which left the Mexico gathering at seven couples rather than a full group. Even so, Sigouin said the format opened the door to “de grandes confidences,” “une vraie vulnérabilité,” and “une authenticité rare.”
Pool, beach, and children
Sigouin said the pool scene about body image and motherhood particularly touched her. She also pointed to a beach conversation between Kathy and Vickens about procrastination, a discussion between Nathalie and Gino about loving someone through very difficult emotional periods, and a talk between Guillaume and Nicolas about the desire to have children.
“Les réunir a ouvert la porte à de grandes confidences, à une vraie vulnérabilité, à une authenticité rare. C’était profondément touchant !”
That mix of workshop framing and reunion footage gives the closing week a sharper edge than a standard wrap-up. The show ended, but the Mexico segment left viewers with the most useful part of the format: people saying what they actually meant, in front of the person whose job was to make that possible.