8 August - The cargo ship
Vlora, charged with almost 20,000
Albanian migrants, lands by force to the “coals quay”of the
Bari port; the cameras of
TGRApulia shoot the scene. In the next days, the RAI news (both local and national) follow the development of events, showing to Italy the dramatic image of the refugees amassed in the
Stadio della Vittoria, until to the forced repatriation of the most of them.[1]
Fininvest
17 January: on
Italia 1,
Emilio Fede, director of
Studio Aperto (Open Studio), beating on time RAI, announces on air the beginning of
Desert Storm and follows the events with a long special edition, until 8 AM;[2] the news program had been launched just the day before. The 29 July,
TG4, the third Finivest news program, starts on
Rete4, directed by Edvige Bernasconi.
1 October - Long running US animated comedy series The Simpsons begins broadcasting on television stations all across Italy for the first time. The series was premiered on
Canale 5.
Debuts
Rai
Miniseries
Felipe ha gli occhi azzurri (Felipe has blue eyes) – by Gianfranco Albano and
Felice Farina, with
Claudio Amendola,
Silvio Orlando and the eight-years old Filipino child Victor Vicente as protagonist; 2 seasons. The miniseries, also if treats challenging topics like the clandestine immigration and the exploitation of the minors, gets a huge public success, with 10 million viewiers.[3]
Serials
I ragazzi del muretto (The little wall boys) – coming-of-age serial, set in a Rome high-school, with Francesca Antonelli and Lorenzo Diglio; 3 seasons. Unlike many similar products, it treats also serious matters as racism and drug.[4]
Variety
Avanzi (Leftovers) – with Serena Dandini (also author),
Corrado Guzzanti and a debuting
Luciana Litizzetto; 3 seasons. It begins as a parody of the Italian television while in the two later seasons the satire is extended to the whole society.[5] The leftovers of the title are “shows never aired, found in the RAI archives”, obviously staged by the actors.
Diritto di replica (Right to reply) – semiserious talk show, hosted by
Sandro Paternostro and
Fabio Fazio, with controversial personalities defending themselves as guests ; 2 seasons.[7]
Turisti per caso (Accidental tourists) – humorous
travel show, with Patrizio Roversi and Syusy Blady; 18 seasons.[8]
Fininvest
Variety
Non è la RAI (It's not RAI) – musical and game show ideated by
Gianni Boncompagni and hosted by
Erica Bonaccorti,
Paolo Bonolis and
Ambra Angiolini (debuting 15 years old), with a cast composed almost entirely by female teen-agers, some of which, as Angiolini herself and
Claudia Gerini, destined to a career in the show business; 4 seasons. The program becomes a cultural phenomenon, with episodes of stardom for the adolescent showgirls but is also heavily criticized for the given image of the young woman, shallow and sexually precocious.[9]
Il commissario Corso (Chief Corso) – by Alberto Sironi and Gianni Lepre, with
Diego Abantantuono as a Southern police superintendent in Milan; realized for the coproduction series
Eurocops.[12]
News and educational
Il portalettere (The postman) –
Piero Chiambretti, as an irreverent postman, delivers the
Andrea Barbato’s open letters to public personalities, moreover politicians; the last one is the Republic President
Francesco Cossiga,.[13]
Profondo Nord (Deep North) – political
talk show hosted by
Gad Lerner; the journalist travels among the Northern Italy towns, trying to understand the reasons of the
Lega Nord’s success.[14]
Viaggio in Italia, schegge dagli anni ’60 (Journey in Italy, splinters from the Sixties) – montage film by Filippo Porcelli, realized exclusively with material from the RAI archives.[15]
8 August - The cargo ship
Vlora, charged with almost 20,000
Albanian migrants, lands by force to the “coals quay”of the
Bari port; the cameras of
TGRApulia shoot the scene. In the next days, the RAI news (both local and national) follow the development of events, showing to Italy the dramatic image of the refugees amassed in the
Stadio della Vittoria, until to the forced repatriation of the most of them.[1]
Fininvest
17 January: on
Italia 1,
Emilio Fede, director of
Studio Aperto (Open Studio), beating on time RAI, announces on air the beginning of
Desert Storm and follows the events with a long special edition, until 8 AM;[2] the news program had been launched just the day before. The 29 July,
TG4, the third Finivest news program, starts on
Rete4, directed by Edvige Bernasconi.
1 October - Long running US animated comedy series The Simpsons begins broadcasting on television stations all across Italy for the first time. The series was premiered on
Canale 5.
Debuts
Rai
Miniseries
Felipe ha gli occhi azzurri (Felipe has blue eyes) – by Gianfranco Albano and
Felice Farina, with
Claudio Amendola,
Silvio Orlando and the eight-years old Filipino child Victor Vicente as protagonist; 2 seasons. The miniseries, also if treats challenging topics like the clandestine immigration and the exploitation of the minors, gets a huge public success, with 10 million viewiers.[3]
Serials
I ragazzi del muretto (The little wall boys) – coming-of-age serial, set in a Rome high-school, with Francesca Antonelli and Lorenzo Diglio; 3 seasons. Unlike many similar products, it treats also serious matters as racism and drug.[4]
Variety
Avanzi (Leftovers) – with Serena Dandini (also author),
Corrado Guzzanti and a debuting
Luciana Litizzetto; 3 seasons. It begins as a parody of the Italian television while in the two later seasons the satire is extended to the whole society.[5] The leftovers of the title are “shows never aired, found in the RAI archives”, obviously staged by the actors.
Diritto di replica (Right to reply) – semiserious talk show, hosted by
Sandro Paternostro and
Fabio Fazio, with controversial personalities defending themselves as guests ; 2 seasons.[7]
Turisti per caso (Accidental tourists) – humorous
travel show, with Patrizio Roversi and Syusy Blady; 18 seasons.[8]
Fininvest
Variety
Non è la RAI (It's not RAI) – musical and game show ideated by
Gianni Boncompagni and hosted by
Erica Bonaccorti,
Paolo Bonolis and
Ambra Angiolini (debuting 15 years old), with a cast composed almost entirely by female teen-agers, some of which, as Angiolini herself and
Claudia Gerini, destined to a career in the show business; 4 seasons. The program becomes a cultural phenomenon, with episodes of stardom for the adolescent showgirls but is also heavily criticized for the given image of the young woman, shallow and sexually precocious.[9]
Il commissario Corso (Chief Corso) – by Alberto Sironi and Gianni Lepre, with
Diego Abantantuono as a Southern police superintendent in Milan; realized for the coproduction series
Eurocops.[12]
News and educational
Il portalettere (The postman) –
Piero Chiambretti, as an irreverent postman, delivers the
Andrea Barbato’s open letters to public personalities, moreover politicians; the last one is the Republic President
Francesco Cossiga,.[13]
Profondo Nord (Deep North) – political
talk show hosted by
Gad Lerner; the journalist travels among the Northern Italy towns, trying to understand the reasons of the
Lega Nord’s success.[14]
Viaggio in Italia, schegge dagli anni ’60 (Journey in Italy, splinters from the Sixties) – montage film by Filippo Porcelli, realized exclusively with material from the RAI archives.[15]