Happy Trails to Tex Willer Creator Bonelli

A tip of the ten-gallon hat to commemorate Gian Luigi Bonelli, father of Italy’s most famous Western comic “Tex Willer,” who died aged 92 January, 2001. Bonelli and wife Tea created a publishing empire starting with Tex in 1948, a politically correct cowboy decades before “Dances with Wolves.”Tex exemplified the Italian fascination with all things American but with a European sensibility. While American 1950s comic and movie heroes played out “cowboy vs. Indians” drama Tex, a federal agent on a reservation, took a Navajo bride (Lylith) and was a close friend of Kit Carson. Although Tex was set in Arizona, Bonelli, who visited the States many years after creating him, took inspiration from the Tuscan cowboy country Maremma and the rocky Sardinian interior. Tex still sells around 320,000 copies weekly, son Sergio Bonelli carries on the legacy. Sergio Bonelli editore is Italy’s largest comic publisher producing popular titles like Dylan Dog, Nathan Never and Martin Mystere. www.informacitta.it/texwiller/main.asp Tex Willer online

The First Soap Opera for Cell Phones

At last, the intertwining of irresistable high technology and human drama…the rocky love story of Leo and Tania is speeding its way to WAP-mobile phones throughout Italy. Called a “swap opera” (soap opera for WAP phones) the country that elevated opera as an art form moves on with new technologies. The story hits the usual opera themes: “amore e corna,” or rather love & unfaithfulness. Read the intro & pilot, then follow developments at the web site: www.wikeyfun.com

Milingo: spared excommunication, but no pardon for fine

Controversial Archbishop Emanuel Milingo, who risked excommunication after marrying a fellow Moon-follower in New York City last May, seems to have patched things up with the Vatican, but there are some authorities which always have the final word. Milingo made a surprise visit to the Pope, vacationing at Castel Gandolfo, starting talks that prevented his estrangement from the Catholic Church on Aug. 20, 2001. Milingo, however,has no chance of appeal from an everyday authority–traffic cops fined him about $100 for leaving his gray Renault Twingo in a no-parking zone.

Related resources:
www.archbishopmilingo.org
More on Milingo from the official site

Italy by Numbers: Long, Raucous Vacations

30-36 vacation days, yearly (France)
24-36 vacation days, yearly (Italy)
22-25 vacation days, yearly (Spain)
10-20 vacation days, yearly (USA)
70% Italians considered "obnoxious" on holiday
Italians have longer vacations than most but that’s not enough to make them well-behaved on the beach, according to newspaper reports. Something to think about when picking a spot for the umbrella: the worst “neighbors” are usually either teenagers or 40- somethings. Offenses range from endless cellphone chatter, impromptu soccer games and blaring radios…The good news is that yesterday, Aug. 19, an estimated six million Italians headed back home.

Related resources:
http://mm1.rai.it:8080/ramgen/rainet/clip/spot5.rm
State broadcaster RAI has taken upon itself to reeducate rude Italians–here’s one of a series of ads aimed at ending rude behavior, starring the aptly-named Scortesi family.

Telling Time in Bologna

The clock at Bologna’s train station was frozen at 10:25 a.m.–the exact time when a terrorist bomb killed 85 and injured 200 in 1980. On August 16 2001, the clock was again set in motion to appease travelers who kept missing trains because they didn’t know any better. “It wasn’t a decision we took lightly,” train officials told newspapers. “But how do you explain to a tourist that a particular clock, stopped at that precise time, is of great symbolic value?” So the clock has started ticking again, along with protests from political groups and families of the victims. Possible solutions include providing a multi-lingual plaque explaining the reason for “stopping time” as well as an exhibit showing just what happened the morning an explosion ripped open the waiting room and a waiting train on the track. Some twenty years later, offcials have yet to attribute responsibility for the deliberate attack.

Related resources
http://valeoggi.tiscali.it/immagini/200108/18/3b7e04cb03e9d
A photo gallery of the bombing…

Town Gets Garlicked: To Keep Mosquitoes at Bay

In folklore garlic was said to keep vampires at bay, now the city of Vercelli is hoping it will have the same effect on those other bloodsuckers–mosquitoes. The first fumigation of “Garlic Reset,” a concentrate of the stinking rose, wafted through city parks in early August. The local government, which spent about $100,000 on the operation,will continue spraying tree-lined streets for the remainder of the month. The evening stroll will never be the same.

Related resources:
www.onde.net/desenzano/comune/servizi/zanzara/ZT-1.htm
An info booklet on the "tiger mosquito" (zanzara tigre) the latest, fiercest version to plague central-Northern Italy

Banned Bistecca: Back Already

Three months after the May 2001 funeral ceremony for Florentine steak, the prized cut of beef has been restored to local restaurants. Butchers have gone round the year-long ban– by cutting around the vertebra where danger of mad cow contamination is more likely. The steaks found in the San Lorenzo market, according to Massimo Manetti head of the butcher’s association, are all either boneless or certified under 12 months old. The new agricultural minister, Giovanni Alemanno, has taken up the crusade and vows to have the ban lifted by the EU in September.
Related resources:
Two addresses for the fearless–
Buca Lapi (Florence) Via del Trebbio, 1/R Tel.055 213768
Da Padellina (Strada in Chianti) C.so di Popolo 54, Tel. 055 858388

Brunch Italian Style: the Addresses

The recent media-go-round was kicked off by newspaper La Repubblica: a seemingly innocent evergreen about Italy’s brunch trend (which dates about five years back) was picked up and unduly magnified, perhaps due to poor translation, by foreign press.
Italians and expats alike do enjoy Sunday brunch–a relatively inexpensive way to see friends and chat over the papers. It hardly signals the demise of the traditional family luncheon as intimated–it’s more a way to beat the Sunday blues for young professionals who’ve moved far from home.
A few caveats: this is strictly a social thing, a way to hang out (stare insieme) rather than eat a fab meal.
Best way to avoid mediocre food and sketchy service: reserve ahead and go early.
A brunch outing ranges from around $10-15 USD…And don’t be alarmed if instant coffee is presented in several varieties as if it were a luxury–instant coffee makers have been one of the biggest sponsors of the trend–check out this site of a noted brand for brunch locales throughout Italy. www.brunch.it
We thought we’d add to the bru ha ha with highly-rated staff picks:
Milan:
Le Biciclette – v. Torti (Navigli area) tel. 02.58104325
Gran Burrone- v.P. Paoli (Navigli) tel.02.58100216 part-owner Jovanotti, very cool vibe

Rome: Bibli – Via dei Fienaroli 23 (Trastevere) tel. 06.5884097 bookstore and cultural association.

Florence:
Rose’s via del Parione 26r tel. 055.287090 Saturdays only.
Hemingway p.za Piattellina 9r (Oltrarno area) tel. 055. 284781

Turin:
Lutèce p.za Carlo Emanuele II 21 tel. 011.88.76.44 68 Super chic

Wine online: Bank on it

Only in Italy could a bank sell wine: Banca CR Asti is the latest to launch a portal to capitalizing on goods of the grape. The web site –called “catanabuta” or “grab a bottle” in Piedmontese dialect–hooks up producers, buyers and customers. Bank management decided to branch out to offer more services to its clients, many of them involved with wine-making in the region.
www.catanabuta.com

Etna Ice Cream: A Volcanic treat

The hottest new flavor in Italian ice cream takes its name from the Etna volcano. Vanilla and cherry ice cream laced with anise liqueur, perched on a base of sponge cake. The final touch: black powdered sugar, for that realistic ash-effect.
In an attempt to drum up business since rolling lava scared off tourists, caf? owner Francesco Urz? of Catania started giving away the “Etna Earth” flavor to regular customers. He told zoomata only about 10% of them refused–convinced it would bring bad luck. Etna, which got busy again the last half of July 2001, is Europe’s highest active volcano.