Blanca Imma Tataranni and the fiction that pays homage to

“Blanca”, “Imma Tataranni” and the fiction that pays homage to Mattarella

Then he says that you get lost in the connections. I’m talking about television, but about a game of reflexes. On social media, Prof. Alessandro Orsini brought up the President of the Republic: “But is President Mattarella aligned with the bloodthirsty dictator Netanyahu, who in these hours is killing and massacring dozens of Palestinian children?” And how would Mattarella fare, if it were his children and grandchildren who died under Netanyahu’s bombs?” In a strange twist of fate, a nephew of the president was appointed to the board of ALuiss, the support body of the University of Confindustria, where our professor teaches. I’m sure there will be no retaliation against Orsini (ah, the virtue of academic neutrality!), although I suspect people of the caliber of Luigi Gubitosi, Giuliano Amato, Monica Maggioni, Andrea Zoppini, Paolo Magri and Antonino Mattarella will don’t do it I appreciate the very honest dealings with the professor. Luckily there is a TV.

In two Rai dramas, the head of state is paid homage in an unusual and very beautiful way. In the first episode of the third season of “Imma Tataranni – Deputy Prosecutor”, played by the excellent Vanessa Scalera, after a move the judge places the picture of the President of the Republic on a shelf and caresses him as if he were a patron saint. On other occasions he turns to him to seek dialogue, as is the case with sacred images: “President, let the bitter cup pass from me.” Already in the first episode of the second season of “Blanca”, played by the excellent Maria Chiara Giannetta, there is a scene in which the President of the Republic appears.

First in the dream: Now Blanca is no longer a simple intern, but a special advisor to the state police and Mattarella is giving her an important honor. But in the end, the real president (actor Stefano Masciarelli) appears to personally congratulate Blanca for saving the city of Genoa from a massacre. Perhaps Orsini would do better to watch more television than to respond to the invitations of those who love the truth more than their audience.