Ciao bella? Italy’s plastic surgery magazine

zoomata.com staff Italy is the latest country to have the quest for beauty through plastic surgery turned into a magazine.

Called “New You” in English, the title was hard to find at newsstands in its initial roll-out of 20,000 copies.
As the slogan “the culture of beauty” implies, this rag is meant to be taken more seriously than the average beauty-parlor flip through. The masthead boats a list of international experts, 15, whose qualifications take up nearly half the page.
The magazine examines a large range of beauty improvements — from spa treatments to zone diets — but the meat centers around plastic surgery. Features like “The breasts you dream of: techniques, time, cost,” and “Take back your hair” are well-balanced, realistic and seem aimed at promoting informed choices.
The ‘dream breast’ article, written by two illustrious Italian plastic surgeons, has a section on scars (‘the surgeon is not a magician, much will depend on your type of skin’) and a sidebar about yearly check-ups necessary for every type of implant.

Unfortunately, the same could not be said for the advertisers — from breast suction-cup gizmo Brava to vitamin supplements promising miraculous improvements — who present an evident contradiction to the good-sense information contained in the articles.

In a country where cutting a good figure, or ‘bella figura,’ is a national obsession, the magazine is likely to be a success. Take permatanned Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, for example. Berlusconi, who disappeared for a nip, tuck and hair transplant, reassured Italians in his end-of-year state address that his hair is “growing marvelously” and he would recommend that “those who can afford it have a duty to present themselves in the best possible way.”

Even the average Italian, according to judges, has a “right” to look good. Last summer, Italy’s highest court fined a husband 500 euro for not letting his wife “use make-up, do her hair and dress” in order to “express her femininity.”? text + photo 1999-2005 zoomata.com
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Italian inmates offer ‘stolen kisses’

by Nicole Martinelli It just may be the perfect gift for star-crossed lovers: “stolen” kisses of chocolate. The idea is the brainchild of inmates in Milan’s San Vittore prison, who are selling 100 limited-edition boxes of candy.

The stolen kisses project is the latest tongue-in-cheek creative offering from the prison, where inmates have also invented a sit-com about life behind bars (called “Beautiful Inside”), penned a recipe book and regularly put out web magazine.

The idea behind stolen kisses or “baci rubati” in Italian?

“We all need love, every single day,” Emilia Patruno, a journalist and volunteer at San Vittore who helped with the project told zoomata via email. “Some of us more than others. It’s as simple as that.”

Sold on the web site or at the cafe across the street from the prison, the candy is a steal at 12 pieces for 18 euro ($22) or 35 pieces for 25 euro ($31). Though the concept and packaging is playful, the men behind bars at San Vittore have written a 100-page e-book, free to download from the site, subtitled ‘words of love from prison’ that takes a much more thorough look at the emotional state of prisoners.

Patruno says they hope to find a partner to produce the “stolen kisses” on a larger scale in the near future. ? text 1999-2005 zoomata.com, photo courtesy www.ildue.it
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Related resources:
www.ildue.it
San Vittore’s creative hub site — home to the chocolates @ e-book…