Striscia la notizia

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The logo of this progam.
The logo of this progam.

Striscia la notizia is an Italian television program on the Mediaset-controlled Canale 5. Its name in Italian translates as "the news is sneakin'", a probable allusion to the Biscione ("Big Snake"), the snake which is part of Canale 5's logo. Founded in 1987, it is meant to be a parody of the daily news, which airs right before the program, but Striscia also satirizes government corruption and exposes scams with the help of local reporters who are also comedians. The program is produced by Antonio Ricci and is hosted by two major comedians. Usually Ezio Greggio (who co-founded the show with D'Angelo) is assisted by another comedian (such as Enzo Iacchetti) for the winter season, after which there is a change of guard.

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[edit] The Gabibbo

The Gabibbo, an Italian cultural icon acts as the mascot and is the soul of the show. Gabibbo is a caricature of the layman of Southern Italian origin, a low-income worker who lives near the docks of Genoa. Always loud, braggart but pungent in his naive but straightforward ways, he butts in everywhere he sees new friends to chat to with a childlike enthusiasm always running after the veline. the show's two dancing showgirls. He is, in some ways, like the Cockney type often seen in British comedies.


[edit] The veline

The term "velina" comes from the name of the guidelines issued to journalists by the Ministero della Cultura Popolare (Ministry of Popular Culture), during Fascist rule. The "veline" stated which news could be printed and which would be censored. The veline are two young women in their early twenties, one blonde, the other brunette. Initially, they came onstage to hand the news to the hosts; today they perform short dance breaks or stacchetti, always finishing up on the news anchors’ desk. They usually perform in swim-suits or tank tops and sing pop tunes as they dance. The veline probably evolved from the scantily clad waitresses who served at the tables in Drive-In, the show that made Greggio and D'Angelo widely known in the late eighties. The veline have become the most popular female icons on Italian TV. The names of the veline are announced after a long beauty pageant during the summer. The program is called Veline. A similar program, "Velone" "Velone" (which means "grown up veline"), is a contest for women in their 50s and 60s (although some are nearly 100). As in "Veline," the women dance and perform in brief sketches. Each September a new "velona" is chosen.

[edit] The veline

Names Years
Cristina Prevosti, Stefania Dall'Olio, Eliette Mariangelo, Micaela Verdiani 1988
Jordy Gordon, Indra Smith, Simonetta Pravettoni,
Terry Sessa, Annalisa Gambi (not all the season)
1989/1990
Laura Paternoster, Monica Spreafico, Simonetta Pravettoni,
Terry Sessa, Sonia Grey, Angela Cavagna (the nurse)
1990/1991
Ana Laura Ribas, Terry Sessa, Simonetta Pravettoni 1991/1992
Cecilia Belli, Fanny Cadeo 1992/1993
Cecilia Belli, Laura Valci, Fanny Cadeo 1993/1994
Miriana Trevisan, Laura Freddi 1994/1995
Alessia Merz, Cristina Quaranta 1995/1996
Roberta Lanfranchi, Marina Graziani 1996/1997
Alessia Mancini, Marina Graziani 1997/1998
Roberta Lanfranchi, Marina Graziani 1998/1999
Maddalena Corvaglia, Elisabetta Canalis 1999/2002
Giorgia Palmas, Elena Barolo 2002/2004
Lucia Galeone, Vera Atyushkina 2004/2005
Melissa Satta, Thais Souza Wiggers 2005/2008
Melissa Satta, Veridiana Mallmann 2008/-

[edit] The Tapiro d'Oro

The Tapiro d'Oro (Golden Tapir), a small golden statue, is a special "prize" delivered to big celebrities or politicians who have been humiliated or defeated. Although many personalities take it in front of the cameras in the hope of getting attention for themselves, others run away and Valerio Staffelli, a special correspondent for the show, has to run after them until they finally take it. Other times, however, the bodyguards have been known to have acted aggressively breaking the reporters' noses and camcorders. Once time, Rai Uno Director Fabrizio Del Noce, cornered by Staffelli banged his microphone on his face breaking his nose.

[edit] Striscia and the Italian show business

Veline's name (invented by the co-founders and their producer) nowadays is often attributed (often disparagingly) to any famous girls on TV with little or no intellectual gifts. Often criticized by high-brow critics and feminists as the symbol of trash-TV, the veline are, however, much more likely to be sought by producers of Italian soap operas, TV series or shows after just one year on Striscia than any other female candidates. They are considered the ideal match for prominent soccer players and therefore a role-model for many young viewers. Enzo Iacchetti, one of the hosts, had a long relationship (broken when she decided to pose nude for a 2007 calendar of the Max magazine) with Maddalena Corvaglia, a velina from a previous edition of Striscia.

[edit] External links

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