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Il Fatto Quotidiano: “Sui social trovi Vasco o anche come farti del male. Scegli in base a ciò che già ti interessa. Se scegli certe cose è per un tessuto emotivo segnato”: parla Francesca Fialdini
Da domenica 17 maggio, in seconda serata su Rai 3, Francesca Fialdini torna con “Fame d’amore”. Le voci di una generazione ferita si alzano con forza e determinazione: sono i giovani che ogni giorno affrontano la battaglia silenziosa dei disturbi del comportamento, portando con sé il peso del dolore ma anche la straordinaria capacità di trovare, nonostante tutto, il coraggio di andare avanti.
Le loro storie di sofferenza e resilienza, diventano oggi testimonianze preziose di una lotta che merita di essere ascoltata, compresa e sostenuta dall’intera società.
“In questo periodo vedo un disagio giovanile che emerge ogni giorno da casi di cronaca spietata. – ha detto la conduttrice a Sette de Il Corriere della Sera – Bisognerebbe approfondire cosa c’è a monte di questi casi di cronaca, una vera emergenza sociale. Ma la tv lo fa malvolentieri”.
E ancora: “Sono i social che creano mostri o i social sono solo un proseguimento di ciò che i giovani coltivano dentro? Io credo che non siano i social che offrono modelli sbagliati, ma nei social i ragazzi trovano conforto su modelli già interiorizzati. Sui social puoi trovare Chopin o Vasco, o anche come farti del male, e tu scegli in base a ciò che già ti interessa. Quando scegli certe cose è perché c’è già un tessuto emotivo segnato”.
L'articolo “Sui social trovi Vasco o anche come farti del male. Scegli in base a ciò che già ti interessa. Se scegli certe cose è per un tessuto emotivo segnato”: parla Francesca Fialdini proviene da Il Fatto Quotidiano.
On social media you find Vasco, or even how to harm yourself. Choose based on what already interests you. If you choose certain things, it’s because of an emotionally marked fabric: speaks Francesca Fialdini.
Starting this Sunday, May 17th, in the late evening on Rai 3, Francesca Fialdini returns with “Fame d’amore” (Hunger for Love). The voices of a generation wounded rise with strength and determination: they are the young people who every day face the silent battle of behavioral disorders, carrying with them the weight of pain but also the extraordinary ability to find, despite everything, the courage to go on.
Their stories of suffering and resilience become today valuable testimonies of a struggle that deserves to be heard, understood, and supported by the entire society.
“In this period, I see a youthful malaise that emerges every day from cases of ruthless crime. – said the host to Sette de Il Corriere della Sera – One should delve into what lies beneath these criminal cases, a real social emergency. But television rarely does so.”
And still: “Are social media creating monsters or are they simply a continuation of what young people cultivate within themselves? I believe that it is not social media that offer wrong models, but in social media young people find comfort in already internalized models. On social media you can find Chopin or Vasco, or even how to harm yourself, and you choose based on what you already find interesting. When you choose certain things, it's because there's already an emotionally marked fabric.”
The article “On social media you find Vasco or even how to harm yourself. Choose based on what you already find interesting. If you choose certain things is for an emotionally marked fabric” speaks Francesca Fialdini comes from Il Fatto Quotidiano.
#FrancescaFialdini #Famed’amore #HungerforLove #SettedeIlCorriere #Chopin #Vasco #IlFattoQuotidiano
These #Picassos prompted a #gender #war at an #Australian #ArtGallery leading to a #gender #discrimination lawsuit.
But the #artworks at the center of the uproar were not really by #Picasso or the other #famed #artists billed as their #creators, it emerged this week when the #curator of the #womenonly #exhibition admitted she had #painted them herself.
#Women #Transgender #LGBTQ #LGBTQIA #Australia #Entertainment #TheArts #Painting
An Australian art museum curator has divulged that she was the creator of three paintings that she presented as works by Pablo Picasso -- and which prompted a gender discrimination case when she only permitted female gallery patrons to view them. The paintings were part of an exhibition called the Ladies Lounge at the Museum of Old and New Art in Tasmania curated by Kirsha Kaechele, who said this week that inquiries from the Picasso Administration about the works had prompted her to confess she had painted them. The paintings have been displayed at the museum for more than three years.