January 26: The doctor Massimo Inardi, an expert in classical music, loses the title of champion of the quiz Rischiatutto. He had retained the title for eight weeks, after having gained the (by then) astronomical sum of 48.300.000 liras. Inardi, a renowned parapsychology scholar, became very popular and received the nickname of “magician” for his presumed extrasensory perception power to read the quiz's answers in the mind of the presenter Mike Bongiorno. In June, Inardi wins the final of the show.[1]
April 6: Beginning of broadcasts for the cable television channel Telebiella, founded by the businessman and TV director Giuseppe Sacchi and by the anchorman Enzo Tortora. In spite of its poor means, it is met with a wide success in the Biella district. Its example is followed by other local cable television channels in the whole Italy.[4] Another breaking in the RAI monopoly are the foreign channels (TSI1, Tv Koper-Capodistria, Antenne 2) relayed also in the internal regions of Italy by private aerials.[5]
August 26: RAI broadcasts in PAL color the opening ceremony of the 1972 Summer Olympics.[6] Until September 11, the games are shown in color, alternating between the PAL and SECAM systems. The German system appears to be the superior one. The expected transition of RAI to color television, wanted by the Post and Communication minister Giovanni Gioia, is however further delayed by the opposition of the Republican Party, which sees it as an incentive to consumerism. The Republican Party threatens a government crisis about the matter.[7]
September 20: for the Festa dell’Unità, the PCI puts into operation a cable television channel, broadcasting the events of the festival.[8]
December 15: the convention assigning the radio-TV services to RAI, is expected to expire after twenty years. It is extended for another year.[8]
Gulp (later Supergulp) – show of “TV comics[9]”, care of Guido De Maria and Giancarlo Governi, with characters both classical (Corto Maltese) and specially created (Nick Carter). It's the most beloved Italian show for children in the Seventies.
Donnarumma all’assalto (Donnarumma attacks) – by Marco Leto, from the Ottiero Ottieri's novel, with Gianni Garko and Stefano Satta Flores. The construction of a factory in Pozzuoli puts in conflict the industrial culture (represented by a corporate psychologist) and the ancestral one of Southern Italy (represented by the unemployed Donnarumma) .
Con rabbia e con dolore (With rage and grief) – by Giuseppe Fina, with Sergio Fantoni and Tino Carraro; an idealistic architect comes into contrast with his father-in-law, an unscrupulous building contractor.
Il marchese di Roccavedina – by Edmo Fenoglio, script by Tullio Pinelli, from the Luigi Capuana's novel, with Domenico Modugno and Marisa Belli; 3 episodes. A Sicilian aristocrat commits a crime of passion and goes unpunished, but remorse drives him to madness.
Una donna un paese (A woman, a country) - by Carlo Lizzani and Claudio Nasso; interviews to 13 prominent women of politics and culture from the whole world, from Carla Fracci to Indira Gandhi.[23]
Nascita di una dittatura (Birth of a dictatorship) – by Sergio Zavoli; inquiry in six episodes about the coming to power of the fascism, fifty years after the march on Rome. It's today again a precious historical document for the interviews to the survivor witnesses of the events, fascist or antifascist, some of which (as Amedeo Bordiga) deceased before the airing.[24]
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