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#italy: sanremo
8iunie · 1 year
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Victoria De Angelis | Festival di Sanremo 2023 | Ariston Theatre | 09.02.2023
📸 Daniele Venturelli / Getty Images
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mossmx · 3 months
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Fiorello non gliene frega niente degli insulti lui e Ama si sono divertiti THEY MIGHT BE CRINGE BUT THEY ARE FREE
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bandaalarga · 3 months
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Un italiano vero
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blogitalianissimo · 3 months
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Qui di seguito i contatti Rai per protestare contro l'Eurovision:
Music department email: [email protected]
Online contact form: https://contactcenter.rai.it/app/scriverai
Phone number: 800.93.83.62 (9:00 to 13:00 Monday to Friday)
Phone number for abroad: 0039 06 87408198
RAI 1 instagram: https://www.instagram.com/rai1official
RAI 1 twitter: https://twitter.com/RaiUno
RAI 2 twitter: https://twitter.com/RaiDue
RAI Radio 2 instagram: https://www.instagram.com/rairadio2/
RAI Radio 2 twitter: https://twitter.com/RaiRadio2
Source (xxxxx)
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odetokeons · 3 months
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sanremo 2024 out of context
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fiumedivita · 3 months
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EBU is always so worried that Eurovision nights will be too long and end too late, meanwhile in Italy this is the plan for this year's Sanremo:
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1. Sanremo shows 2024 (the actual show): from 6th to 10th February at 8:45pm*.
2. Viva Rai 2 Viva Sanremo! (the after show): at whatever time Amadeus (the host) will decided to let it start.
3. Domenica In (Sanremo ending special with all the interviews): Sunday 11th February from 2pm to 7:55 pm.
*nobody knows at what time Amadeus, host and current King of the Sanremo, will end the show each night, but we can presume it will be sometime after 2am during the week and probably at around 3am for the final.
UPDATE: Ama just confirmed it definitely won't end before 2am during the week. Pray for us Italians, because that means that the after show will go on at least until 3am.
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just-a-lil-anguria · 3 months
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TUMBLERINE MIE, BUONASERA ♥️
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mooncurses · 3 months
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To add to the current trend of calling out the bullshit that Zionists spout, here's a collection of not so fun facts for my friends outside of Italy.
Some of you may have heard of how Ghali, one of the most famous singers in Italy who is of Tunisian descent, has been criticized by Israel's Ambassador to Italy Alon Bar, who accused him of spreading hate just because he called for a ceasefire in Gaza. Then to remind us all of how much of a grip on the balls of our entire nation Isr*el has, a letter recounting the October 7 happenings was read on air to "balance" things out politically speaking (as our useless Deputy Premier and Foreign Minister stated, whatever the fuck that means). On his part Ghali responded with confusion and honesty, simply saying that as an artist he's always going to use his platform to talk about what he thinks is important, besides the fact that he's always been supportive of the Palestinian people since he was a kid (thus reiterating how their struggle has NOT started on October 7). In no part he ever invoked anything but peace, and yet he sparked controversy.
Of course what this episode merely sheds light on is the shameful and blatant climate of selfcensorship that has taken over the Italian mainstream media. It's not even an isolated accident: just days prior another contestant of the Sanremo festival, Dargen D'Amico, was attacked by the mainstream press after he dared take a minute after his exhibition to remind everyone that with our silence we are all complicit in the deaths of countless children right now. Sure enough he was forced to apologize "for getting political" the very day after.
To protest this cowardly and disgusting attitude that has become the standard in Italy, a peaceful sit-in was organized today in Naples in front of RAI (the public TV network that broadcast the Sanremo festival and that is funded with tax payers' money). After the protestants tried to hang a pro-Palestine banner on the fence of the building, police brutality quickly ensued and several people got hurt after being hit in the head with batons (you can find a video of the whole scene unfolding here).
So the thing here is that you can see how the top brass of our government desperately wants us all to just be complacent in the killing of Palestinians at hands of Isr*el. Much like what happened with the bombing of Rafah carefully made to overlap with the Super Bowl, the pro Isr*el Western governements very much hope that our silence can be bought with as little as good old panem et circaenses. And I've gotta say, at least in the case of Italy, it's almost like in doing so they forget how we young people were taught about genocide in the first place.
They drilled an acute awareness of what genocide looks like into each of our heads throughout our whole grade school life. We would hold our yearly minute of silence for the victims of the Holocaust on Remembrance Day without fail, we would read "Se Questo È Un Uomo" by Primo Levi as early as eight grade and analyze it thoroughly. We would study Hannah Arendt's philosophy while focusing especially on her ideas about the banality of evil that she witnessed during the Nuremberg Trials. Most high schools organized mandatory conferences with Holocaust survivors as speakers and visits at the local synagogue, as well as extra curricular activities (I'm talking weeks long train trips to Dachau and other concentration camps while accompanied by members of survivors associations and historians) to further spread awareness about the horror of the Holocaust and make sure that we would never let it happen again, that we would take a strong stance against it if the situation ever called for it.
And now we are living through the first genocide that's being documented live for the whole world to see and yet apparently nobody can say nothing about it. The countries that so far have taken a strong stance against Isr*el are so few it's absurd considering the enormous amount of damning evidence of war crimes, human trafficking, and ultimately ethnic cleansing that Isr*el is carrying out. It's even more absurd if you think of how casual the Isr*elis are about all of this, perfectly knowing that as long as they are backed by the world's largest powers they are basically untouchable. The banality of evil for real.
But here's the thing. Isr*el is just a country run by the military and made up of brainwashed ultranationalist colonialists, who think it is their birth right to kill every last Palestinian and mock their suffering because that's what they've been told confidently their whole lives. They think that the suffering their people lived in the past made them beyond moral reproach today, that their right to self-defense can spill over to offense and nobody will ever blame them, and they are so convinced of this that they will respond to actual accusations of genocide and war crimes simply by saying "that's antisemitic" and moving on.
Even just recalling the words of Holocaust survivors who spoke up about genocide has stopped clicking in the heads of many people because they see everything pertaining to the Jews as exceptional in its political, social, and historical dimensions, even when it's not. To better explain what I mean let me summarize another fun fact from very recent happenings in Italy. This last January 27, on Remembrance Day, several protests by young people of Palestinian descent and other supporters were held in various cities to condemn Isr*el's actions in Palestine, despite having been forbidden for "security reasons" after some complaints of the Jewish community called for the protest to be rescheduled. Some of the words that were written on the banners that the protestors held are quotes of Primo Levi, a writer and Holocaust survivor who passed in 1987. The aftermath of the protests was basically centered around Noemi Di Segni, the president of the Union of Italian Jewish Communities (UCEI), who said that the remembrance of Levi's words should be left to Jews, and then called for an end to the "verbal violence" against Jews that pro Palestine stances imply.
"Cease the fire of words against us is what we say to those who continue to accuse Israel of war crimes and genocide, with slogans based on nationality and faith, giving credence only to Hamas propaganda and giving new life to prejudices that we had hoped were extinct," Di Segni said. She also said that this kind of "Islamic suprematism" should look for quotes elsewhere, basically.
The funny thing here, however, is that the words that Levi originally spoke and that Di Segni and many other Zionists say have been "appropriated" by Palestinians were words that were never meant to be exclusively related to the Holocaust and the persecution of Jews specifically. All the contrary, they invite caution especially by reiterating that everyone needs to retain awareness of the horrors of genocide, because anyone (even Jews themselves in theory) could let such unspeakable things happen again if they let themselves forget. These are the words:
"Se comprendere è impossibile conoscere è necessario, perché ciò che è accaduto può ritornare, le coscienze possono nuovamente essere sedotte ed oscurate: anche le nostre". (trans: "If understanding is impossible then knowing is necessary, because what happened can come back, the consciences can again be seduced and obscured: even ours.")
This is important because to imply as Di Segni did that the Holocaust is a self contained episode in history, that words of warning against genocide in general can only be used in the context of a particular genocide that happened over 75 years ago, is the exact opposite of what survivors like Levi wanted the world to think.
The title Levi gave to what his English-language publishers called “Survival in Auschwitz” was “Se Questo È un Uomo” (“If This Is a Man”). The Nazis’ crime, he believed, was to treat the Jews as if they weren’t men—human beings. But the Jews’ suffering, he said, did not make them better people, or give them special rights. They had to observe the same moral standards as anyone else. Levi abhorred what we now call “exceptionalism.” This affected his views on Israel. He repeatedly condemned the Israelis’ treatment of the Palestinians. When, in 1982, the Israelis stood by as the Christian Phalangists massacred the Palestinians at Sabra and Shatila, he called for the resignation of Ariel Sharon and Menachem Begin. “Everybody is somebody’s Jew,” he told a reporter, Filippo Gentiloni, from the Italian newspaper Il Manifesto, and he cited the abuse of Poland by the Russians and the Germans. At that point in the interview, printed on June 29, 1982, Gentiloni closed the Levi quote and added a sentence of his own: “And today Palestinians are the Jews of the Israelis.”
Anyways, keep calling things as you see them. It may piss off some people, but it's the only way things can actually start to change in such a mud pool of empty politics and performative activism such as what we're witnessing in most Western countries.
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girlboccaccio · 5 months
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Only honest answers. Open to anyone who -good for them - isn't it*lian, still any it*lian could spam it.
Other suggestions are welcomed on the tags, if someone is indecisive can put the various choices on the tags.
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genericswordsmaiden · 3 months
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mossmx · 3 months
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riassunto:
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bandaalarga · 3 months
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evil diodato essere tipo:
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blogitalianissimo · 3 months
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Perché la protesta contro l'eurovision?
Perché a noi i sionisti non piacciono, e se, giustamente, escludi dalla competizione la Russia per quello che sta facendo all'Ucraina, devi fare lo stesso con Isr*ele che sta compiendo un vero e proprio genocidio ai danni dei palestinesi. Ovviamente questo non è un problema solo degli ultimi mesi, è da oltre 70 anni che i palestinesi vengono vessati, ma da ottobre fino ad adesso sono stati uccisi 30.000 civili, tra cui una marea di bambini e minori. È agghiacciante, e se nemmeno questo basta ad escludere quegli assassini dalla competizione di che parliamo.
Per scrupolo ho condiviso tutti i contatti possibili della Rai, sperando che, anche grazie a Ghali e Dargen che hanno alzato la voce, più gente possibile si unisca alla causa.
Se non verremo ascoltati sono pronta a boicottare l'Eurovision, quest'anno e i prossimi, e da quello che leggo anche altra gente è della mia stessa opinione, e ne sono felice.
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babsi-and-stella · 6 months
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Marianne Faithfull, Italy, January 1967.
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machiavellli · 1 month
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How I look in public while listening to Ma non tutta la vita by my grandparents
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bruttomisandro · 3 months
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here we go again
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