“Us against them!” with Carolin & David Kebekus: What does the sibling show have to offer?

“Us against them!” with Carolin & David Kebekus
What does the sibling show have to offer?

Carolin and David Kebekus want to win against siblings in a TV duel.

© ProSieben / Willi Weber

“We against them! The Kebekus Siblings Show” starts on August 29 on ProSieben. How do Carolin and David Kebekus work as a team?

From Tuesday, August 29, at 8:15 p.m. on ProSieben, Carolin (43) and David Kebekus (39) will compete against prominent siblings in several rounds on four TV evenings. The game is played in “Wir gegen die! The Kebekus Siblings Show” for honor.

Loud ProSieben’s game show is about the questions: “Who recognizes which dish was cooked by their own mother? Who knows better what their own family says about him or her? Who can assess each other better? And which siblings dare each other more?” In the final, the winners will be determined at the gaming table. These pairs of siblings compete against the Kebekus duo: Oti (33) and Motsi Mabuse (42) start, later duels with Benni and Dennis Wolter (both 32), Johannes B. Kerner (58) and sister Julia and Jessica Schwarz follow (46) and sister Sandra. The show will be moderated by Jeannine Michaelsen (41).

Carolin Kebekus: “We are multi-talented”

“We can just have a children’s birthday party? And that will also be broadcast? With the audience and our whole family and friends are there too? It’s just great,” says comedienne Carolin Kebekus, looking forward to the premiere of the show. She explains the recipe for the success of the good sibling relationship with her brother, who is four years younger: “I think there is simply an unconditionality between us, we tacitly defined it with David’s birth and it cannot be terminated.” The best thing about his birth was “that it never simply meant that there were children on the way, but that my parents made me a person who belongs to me. It’s for me, it’s my little brother.”

In the past, she definitely saw being the big sister as an advantage. “I always took advantage of that, he was kind of my slave. I always let him get things I didn’t feel like doing. Something to eat or something to drink and I always wrapped that up in little competitions like, ‘If now a cheetah would be here – David was an animal fan – and he would get a soda from downstairs, it would only take ten seconds. Shall we see how long it would take you?'” David Kebekus, comedian, author and director , in turn benefited from “the fact that my parents, who were always very fair, made things possible for Carolin that then also applied to me. Carolin was paid for a trip or an exchange, then I was allowed to do it too. The same applied to the driver’s license. “

Together, the two would have worked as a team from an early age. “We used to party from time to time when the parents weren’t there. Afterwards we restored the original condition so well that they never noticed it,” says David Kebekus. And why will they also be able to score as a team in the sibling show? “We are multi-talented, we balance each other out because we know each other well,” says Carolin Kebekus. “Our strength is also the unconditional will to win and the professional preparation,” adds David Kebekus with a laugh. “If you like each other, then you don’t need a prescription or rules. Then it just works.”

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