No discounts. “The farewell of Fazio and Littizzetto? The problem is that no one kicked them out, the basic vice is playing the victim when someone goes out into their own business and has made a lot of money. Lega MP Simonetta Matone used these tones on Rai Radio1, guest of ‘Un Giorno da Pecora’, interviewed by Giorgio Lauro and Geppi Cucciari about the familiar faces of Che tempo che fa, which aired yesterday for the last time on Rai3.
Speaking then of the interruption of the relationship with Rai by the presenter of Meia hora a mais, the deputy of the Northern League increased the dose: “Lucia Annunziata said that she does not share anything with this government? But you have to inform, not train who accompanies you, if you leave because you don’t like the executive, doubts arise about you being a journalist. The government is not expelling anyone.” “Who do you feel more sorry for leaving public television?” the question addressed to Matone, who replied: “Perhaps Annunziata, it was a thirty-minute fight, very partisan, but at a high level. Now I would not like to see anyone in particular in Rai, I would just like to see free information”.
The question arises spontaneously and the conductors ask what the other unwanted programs are: “I’m afraid of being shot and becoming their target, but I don’t like certain Reportage operations. Why? I don’t find them objective, every time you ask yourself, but what do they intend? I do not like this. I don’t think they are journalistic investigations that simply aim to provide information, they are assassination operations.”
Source: IL Tempo
Emma Fitzgerald is an accomplished political journalist and author at The Nation View. With a background in political science and international relations, she has a deep understanding of the political landscape and the forces that shape it.