Shut up Says Very high tension in the studio

“Shut up”, “Says …”. Very high tension in the studio

The horrifying images pouring in from Ukraine continue to be the subject of divisions and heated debates on TV shows that try to offer different food for thought and interpretations, with guests regularly at odds over interpretations and arguments of the military conflict. The last episode of It’s not the arenabroadcast on La7 on Sunday evening, dealt with the events between Ukraine and Russia: the different theses of the guests triggered a heated debate in the studio and made the work of the conductor Massimo Giletti, who was there live from Odessa, more difficult.

A hard attack was launched by Fabiola D’Aliesio of the Campanian Federal Secretariat of the P.CARC (Committee for the Support of the Resistance to Communism) to the Ukrainian journalist Kateryna Nesterenko targeted by Russian propaganda. The two found no meeting place in their analyzes and so the verbal confrontation was only the natural consequence. D’Aliesio pointed the finger at the Ukrainian journalist, accusing her of being overly emphatic and accusing her of receiving a range of financial compensation.

“In Ukraine, 50 journalists have disappeared, disappeared from the Zelenskyi government,” was D’Aliesio’s dig. Nesterenko’s reply was not long in coming, and she reacted to the attack received without thinking: “Please shut up for a bit. Please, can we talk or should we shout like in the market?. D’Aliesio commented on her positions, noting to the Ukrainian journalist that she was not ready to applaud all her declarations: “It pays for me to find peace for my children, for the children of all Italians and everyone Ukrainians The need for a better future is paying off for me.

At this point, D’Aliesio, without mincing words, teased her interlocutor again to make an accusation on a personal level: “Who pays you? Madam, shut up because you are paid well to be there to stay, tell us things and cry TV”. This time, too, Nesterenko wanted to defend her position, arguing: “I can’t shut up because there’s a war in my country and you’re shooting Russian fairy tales. Forget this nonsense. The reference referred to the theses about the existence of neoNazi realities in the Ukrainian population, for which the Azov regiment was accused.