Attualità e Information Technology

December 12, 2005

Dicono di noi…

Filed under: Attualità

Segnalo due articoli oggi che ci riguardano:

  • The Guardian - Comics against corruption

    Ask a silly question, and sometimes you get a very revealing answer. The Italian satirist, Beppe Grillo, recently put a full-page advertisement in the International Herald Tribune to promote a cause dear to his heart. In Italy, there is nothing to prevent convicted criminals from being members of parliament. And since the Italian political class is well stocked with convicted felons, quite a few are to be found either in the Rome legislature or the European parliament making laws to add to the ones they have broken.

    Is there, asked Grillo, “another state in some part of the world in which 23 members of parliament have been convicted of a variety of crimes and yet are allowed to sit in parliament and represent their citizens?” (Apparently, there is: Uzbekistan.)

    Admittedly, a few of the parliamentarians on Grillo’s list were found guilty of crimes that might not bother the electorate, such as libel, which can be a penal offence in Italy. But that still left plenty convicted of corruption, and even one or two who had been convicted of corruption twice. All but five of the names on Grillo’s list belong to MPs aligned with Silvio Berlusconi’s rightwing coalition. Thirteen are members of his party, Forza Italia!

    Arguably, the bigger scandal is that people like Grillo are forced to take out advertisements in foreign newspapers in order to air their ideas to their fellow-Italians. The comedian’s blog, which he claims receives 50,000 hits a day, is the latest in a string of attempts by Italian satirists to get around the fact that they can no longer get on television. All six main channels are owned by, or answerable to, Italy’s prime minister.

    Daniele Luttazzi, who disappeared from the nation’s screens after being criticised by Berlusconi three years ago, took to the stage with a review and made a DVD subtitled, “Bin Laden can get on TV, but I can’t.” Sabina Guzzanti, whose projected series was pulled by the state-owned Rai after the first programme in 2003, recycled her material into a show with which she toured the provincial theatre circuit.

    Dario Fo, who never really left the stage, made a video of his satire of Berlusconi, L’Anomalo Bicefalo (The Two-headed Anomaly), in a bid to reach a wider audience. Grillo pioneered the blog and has been followed by Luttazzi, whose site also includes a podcast downloadable as an mp3 file.

    The single exception to the rule that anyone with something rude to say about the Italian government needs to find an ingenious way of saying it is Adriano Celentano. A hugely popular, if ageing singer-songwriter, Celentano showed earlier this year that he had the clout to demand - and secure - freedom from censorship.

    His series of four programmes on Rai was the media event of the year. Some 11.5 million viewers watched the first edition, in which he spotlighted his country’s ranking in the annual Freedom House survey of press freedom. Italy came 77th, which was below several developing nations. In fact, it had the same score as … you thought I was going to say Uzbekistan, didn’t you? No. Don’t be ridiculous. Mongolia.

  • La Vanguardia Digital - El cine se inspira en Berlusconi

Intanto grazie al primo articolo scopriamo che per lo meno anche in Uzbekistan succedono cose strane… ergo non siamo gli unici ad avere rappresentanti così particolari.
Secondo concordo appieno quando scrivono che lo scandalo maggiore è che Grillo sia costretto a comprare un pagina di un giornale straniero per lanciare un messaggio ai suoi concittadini, e che gente del calibro di Luttazzi, Guzzanti e Fo siano stati eliminati dai mass media.

Il secondo articolo invece ci offre un’interessante spunto di riflessione sul ruolo di Berlusconi… A quanto pare fa bene al cinema nostrano!

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Fantastico…

Filed under: Generale

Riporto il post L’Invasione degli Ultracorpi di TVBlog:

Tra loro si chiamano “Embriocons”, gli altri li definiscono “Ratzisti” o “Ratzi-boys”. Sono i membri del partito trasversale che impianterà nell’utero del bipolarismo l’embrione di una nuova democrazia cristiana.

Il “Partito dell’astinenza” emergerà nei prossimi mesi utilizzando anche mezzi di comunicazione non tradizionali come le marce di preghiera, i pellegrinaggi ai luoghi ai luoghi santi e addirittura le marce pacifiste che accompagneranno la guerra preventiva all’Iran.

Ispirandosi alle crociate Fallaciane, i “Ratzy-boys” stanno già conquistando tutti i salotti e i posti di comando in tv proponendo dibattiti e programmi sui “valori”.

Il fatto che alcuni fra gli “astinenti” siano menzionati nei dossier dell’Antimafia rende le loro opinioni ancora più interessanti perché segno di una attitudine di “ricerca”, di “conversione”.

Preparare un dibattito furibondo su divorzio e aborto mentre l’economia scivola verso l’ Argentina e il paese verso i Balcani può apparire strano (a un Europeo) ma sarebbe sciocco sottovalutare le enormi riserve di irrazionalità di questo paese che abbisogna di nuovi D’Annunzio e di nuovi Martinetti….

La fiction a basso costo “Diario di un inquisitore” che sto scrivendo si colloca in questo filone di pensiero e si propone una rilettura critica dei drammi, delle esitazioni e delle riflessioni che accompagnarono – sappiatelo o laicisti! – le difficili decisioni di Tomàs de Torquemada nell’atto di condannare al rogo stregoni e fattucchiere.

Penso di proporla a Gori ma ho anche contattato Endemol.

Mimmo Lombezzi

Semplicemente meraviglioso…

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Yahoo acquista del.icio.us

Filed under: IT, Attualità

Notizia di ieri, Yahoo acquista del.icio.us.

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