a list of info about italian tv shows that no one asked for*

lauranoncrede:

*main reference being network shows

  • they’re expensive but lucrative. tptb invest way more on tv shows (here called “fictions”) than on movies, but they’re never disappointed. especially if they’re period dramas, they’ll look lavish and rarely flop.
  • they’re averagely bad. conceived for audiences that are either uneducated or presumed to be so, they usually feature cringe-worthy plots and dialogue. when they happen to be good, the press will go in shock and never recover.
  • they take forever to be made. you liked your show? if you’re lucky you’ll see it again in two years and you probably won’t know it until its production kicks. i’m not sure why it can take that long, but it probably has to do with bureaucracy and negotiations with the cast
  • they also last forever. if they do well, nothing will stop them. the protagonist wants out? they’ll do a next generation. recasting needed? sure. but that character was the doctor mentioned in the title?? they’ll get another doctor, younger and more beautiful, to cast you down……..
  • their main theme is always the same. “fictions” usually centre around families (the bigger, the better), doctors, priests/nuns and mysteries or families of doctors and priests/nuns involved in mysteries. berlusconi-owned canale 5 sometimes varies with harlequin-style pseudo-crime stories where ridiculously handsome actors alternatively have sex and shoot people for hours. old-fashioned values such as love, family and tradition will always prevail.
  • they’re so bad there was a show about how bad they are. the little gem that is fox-produced boris was a sit com about a cast and crew at work on one of these ‘families of doctors involved in mysteries’ shows. it highlighted all the dirt behind it, including corrupt and politically influenced producers, lazy screenwriters, bad actors and an iconic deeply frustrated director.
  • no young italian will admit to watching any. usually because they actually don’t, but even when they do they’ll pretend otherwise. because network audience is old and (as mentioned) assumed to be poorly educated, they’ll gravitate towards cable and/or foreign shows or watch nothing at all instead. still, if they’re actually tuning in they won’t want to be told they like garbage.
  • episodes are long. a primetime show will air from about 9:30pm to about 11pm. this means we either get movie-long episodes (the montalbano mysteries) or two eps per week, in any case we’ll watch almost two hours of our shows in one night.
  • actual italians don’t speak like that. while the italian network tv sometimes allows swearing, the characters will still talk in a painfully unlikely way. they have no accent unless they function as comic relief and their lines will often be emphatic or heavy with pointless exposition. in the past few years they also began to sound like they were translated from english, which they probably were if the screenwriters watch too many foreign shows and just swallow everything. an example would be the expression “sono cosĂŹ eccitat*”, literal translation of “i’m so excited” that almost dosn’t exist in everyday italian unless you’re a porn star or something. actor pietro sermonti once called this weird language italiese. on the bright side, cable shows luckily avoid this garbage; but they still tend to only do it when the specific regional variation is something of a plot point (neapolitan/roman crime will be involved and so on).
  • the times, they are a-changin’. younger screenwriters are now working and some changes are being made. a few shows from the past years are or have been actually pretty good, although most people won’t admit it due to the cultural stigma attached to rai or, in rare cases, mediaset. still, even the oldest church-going audiences are getting acquainted with librated women, lgbt couples and morally gray characters. i guess we’ll see where that goes.
  • this had no point at all whatsoever. 

cloudfreed:

helloitsbees:

earlhamclassics:

thoodleoo:

thoodleoo:

there’s a lot of evidence that the iliad and the odyssey were actually composed by a variety of poets through an oral tradition rather than just by one poet, so what if the homeric texts are actually just a very long game of D&D

homer, the dm: okay achilles, agamemnon has just taken away your war prize, what do you want to do
achilles’ player: i roll to have a diplomatic conversation with agamemnon
achilles’ player: *rolls a 1*
homer: you throw the staff of speaking at agamemnon’s face and storm off to sulk with your boyfriend

Homer, the DM: Your beautiful Patroclus is dead. What do you do?
Achilles’ player: I fight everyone.
Homer, the DM: You can’t fight everyone. How would you even–
Achilles’ player: *rolls a 20* I fight everyone.
Homer, the DM: *sighs* Fine. You cut a path through the Trojan army, enemy dead strewn in your wake.
Achilles’ player: How many?
Homer, the DM: …lots. Enough to clog the friggin’ river with bodies.
Achilles’ player: I fight the river.
Homer, the DM: You. can. not. fight. the. river.
Achilles’ player: *reaches for dice*

Homer, the DM: Okay guys, so the war’s over, you had a bunch of losses but you won in the end. Time to go home, let’s roll to see who gets there firs—

Odysseus’s player: I got a critical failure.

Homer: The cyclops asks you who you are. What do you do?

Odysseus’s player: I say, “Who me? I’m nobody.”

Homer: Roll for deception.

Odysseus’s player: I got a natural 20.

Homer: The cyclops now completely believes that your name is Nobody. He shouts for help from the other cyclops but they ignore him because he’s telling them that “Nobody hurt him.”

Odysseus’s player:
FUCK yes

the signs as historical anecdotes

astrosoeur:

Aries: The Greek philosopher Diogenes was once captured by pirates and sold into slavery. The slave merchant
asked Diogenes what trade he could be sold into (like a carpenter,
scribe, etc.). Diogenes said his only skill was leading men, and said
that he should be sold to a man who needed a master.

Taurus: In 207 BC, Greek Stoic philosopher Chrysippus died of laughter while watching his drunk donkey eat figs.

Gemini: In the midst of an impassioned debate on the Senate floor, a page
delivers a private message to young Julius Caesar. His opponent, Cato,
demands the letter be read aloud. Caesar initially refused, but after
much pestering, showed the rival senator the note. It was a love letter
from Cato’s half sister.

Cancer: The Roman Emperor
Caligula made his favorite horse Senator and gave it voting rights. The horse was named Incitatus and had a whole stable in
marble complete with furniture and a staff
of servants.

Leo: When Alexander the Great was in Corinth, all the great men
of the
city came to pay him tribute. When he didn’t see Diogenes among them, he
went out to find him, and met the philosopher sun bathing next to
the barrel he lived in. Alexander, conqueror of half the known world,
greeted him and asked if there was anything he could do as a favor to
the famous thinker. Diogenes answered, “Yes, move over a little. You’re
standing in my sun.”

Virgo: Maria Fedorovna, Empress of Russia and wife of Tsar Alexander III, was
known for her charitable works. In fact, she once saved a condemned man
from exile in Siberia by changing a single comma in the warrant signed
by her husband. Instead of reading: “Pardon impossible, to be sent to
Siberia,” she changed the document to read: “Pardon, impossible to be
sent to Siberia.” The man was thus saved and released.

Libra:  The Greek tragedian Aeschylus was killed when an eagle dropped a turtle
on his head, after mistaking it for a rock on which to crack open the
shell.

Scorpio: Pope Stephen VI didn’t like his predecessor, Pope Formosus, and therefore ordered his remains to be dug up and put on trial. At the infamous “Cadaver Synod”
of 897, Pope Stephen VI cross-examined the corpse, declared it guilty,
and had it mutilated and thrown in the Tiber River as punishment.

Sagittarius: Hippocleides of Athens got so drunk at a betrothal dinner party he
jumped on the dinner table and started dancing like a madman. His
prospective father-in-law Cleisthenes of Sicyon told him “Oh son of
Tysander, you have just danced away your marriage.” Hippocleides
responded with “Hippocleides doesn’t care”

Capricorn: The Persian king Xerxes sentenced the sea to 300 lashes for destroying two of his army’s bridges.

Aquarius: Virginia Woolf and her writer friends successfully tricked the Royal Navy into showing them their flagship, the battleship HMS Dreadnought, by pretending to be Abyssinian princes, dressing up with fake beards, skin darkeners and turbans. (Here’s a picture, Virginia to the far left)

Pisces: In 1518, a “dancing plague”
struck Strasbourg, Alsace, whereby hundreds of people danced fervently
in the streets over the period of a month. There was no music nor any apparent reason behind it. Some suffered heart attacks
or strokes, and many others died from sheer exhaustion.