The section of the FAI- Fondo Ambiente Italiano takes us among the natural and historical beauties of the territory. A route of 25 km covered with the campion Federica Amelio
With him are make-up artist Luigi Ciminelli and colleague Federica Castelli, who worked on the "transformation" of Pierfrancesco Favino into Bettino Craxi in hours and hours of study and practical work
The guide to Sentiero Italia is now ready in English
An idea of the young people of âVa sentieroâ, to promote trekking and the highlands of Italy, also among tourists from abroad.
On Thursday, 25 March,
vasentiero.org, the digital guide to Sentiero Italia, produced by Va’ Sentiero, will also be available in English. With constant updates, the guide provides maps, advice and technical reviews of the stages completed and documented by the expedition, along the paths that connect the highlands of Italy, from Friuli-Venezia Giulia to Sardinia.
The guide was conceived and produced by the young people of Vaâ sentiero, as a tool to inspire, for people to examine technical details and discover all the curiosities that are needed to prepare the ideal route, on the basis of personal needs and preferences. To simplify the consultation of the contents, the guide is structured by region, and has reviews of 240 stages, in 14 regions, covering 4881 km (so fa
SanPa, many voices to reconstruct the story of Vincenzo Muccioli and San Patrignano
Released a week ago, the Netflix docu-series is causing much discussion. It is a cross section that reconstructs the history of the community from its foundation in 1978 until Muccioli s death in 1995.
Carlo Gabardini, who produced it together with
Gianluca Neri and Paolo Bernardelli, sums up well what inspired SanPa, the Netflix series dedicated to the San Patrignano community. It is a theme that opens, and in some ways closes, the documentary that has at its centre the figure of
Vincenzo Muccioli.
THE HISTORY OF SANPA
It was in the 1970s that the spread of drugs began to be increasingly discussed in Italy. This was immediately done in sensationalist and accusatory tones. The first episode was a police action on a barge on the Tiber in Rome and caused a great clamour, as
Sciascia and the children: âcarusoâ yesterday, digital zombies today
Today is the centenary of the great Sicilian writerâs birth. His family history is strictly linked to the harsh reality of the sulphur mines, where his grandfather, his father and his brother worked.
Today is the centenary of Leonardo Sciasciaâs birth. He was born in Racalmuto, in the province of Agrigento, from Pasquale Sciascia, an employee, and Genoveffa Martorelli, a housewife.
Sciasciaâs history is rooted in sulphur. His grandfather, Leonardo ,was first a âCarusoâ, then foreman and administrator in the local mines; his father was the administrator of a sulphur mine in Ãssaro, along with his younger son, Leonardoâs brother, a mine expert (they both ended up tragically: young Giuseppe took his life; his father was in prison for attempted murder). âWithout the sulphur mine adventure, there wouldnât have been the writing adventure, of the storyte