30 January: in TV7, the Sergio Zavoli’s reportage Un codice da rifare (The code must be redone), is aired; it asks for the reform of the Italian penal code, still the same ideated by the fascist minister Alfredo Rocco. The program causes a harsh dispute inside RAI: Zavoli is attacked on the press by the vice-president Italo De Feo and defended by the general director Ettore Bernabei and by the RAI journalists who, for the first time in the story of the estate, go on strike.[1]
7-15 February: for the first time RAI shots in colours (with the PAL system) an event, the FIS Alpine World Ski Championships in Val Gardena. Paradoxically, the work is realized only for the viewers abroad, the Italian television being again in black and white.[2]
18 February : the RAI president, Aldo Sandulli, resigns because the controversies due to Un codice da rifare ; the vice-president Umberto Delle Fave replaces him.[2]
May 20: two major Italian TV stars, the comic actor Walter Chiari and the musician and presenter Lelio Luttazzi, are arrested for drug trafficking. In 1971, at the trial, Chiari gets a suspended sentence for personal use of cocaine and Luttazzi is fully exonerated. The affair seriously damages the careers of both.
17 June: 17 millions of Italian viewers stay up until 2 AM, due to the time zones to follow the televised “match of the century”, Italy v West Germany, commented by Nando Martellini; with the victory of the Italian team unleashing popular enthusiasm.[4] On 21 June, the 1970 FIFA world cup final Italia-Brazil gets the greatest audience of the year, with 28.2 million viewers.[5]
8 July: in the Fucino Space Centre, the second telescopic parabolic antennas is inaugurated; it allows RAI to receive TV transmissions from Far East and Pacific Ocean.[6]
90. minuto – sport column of the Sunday evening, giving the results and showing the goals of the Serie A matches; hosted for twenty years by Paolo Valenti and later by various sport journalists. Very popular in Seventies and Eighties, it’s again on air also if it has lost most of its appeal with the advent of the sporting pay-tv.[7]
A come agricoltura (A for agricolture) – magazine for the farmers; 11 seasons.
Rischiatutto – quiz, inspired by Jeopardy! and hosted by Mike Buongiorno; five seasons. The show renews the Lascia o raddoppiìa?’s mass success and relaunches the Bongiorno’s career after a period of relative decline; it’s the first RAI 2 program to enter in the top ten of the audience. It’s yet also accused by critics of notionism and sexism (for the decorative role played by the “female valet” Sabina Ciuffini).[8]
Gli eroi di cartone (Cartoon heroes) – hosted by Lucio Dalla and Franco Mulè (3 seasons) and Mille e una sera (1001 evenings): programs about the history of animated cartoon, both ideated by the historian of cinema Gianni Rondolino and focused (the second moreover) on the European and independent production.
Il paese di Giocagiò (Giocagiò country) – show for pre-schoolers, care of Gianni Rodari and Teresa Bongiorno, scenography by Emanuele Luzzati. In the second seasons, it changes name in Il gioco delle cose (The things game).[9]
In 1970, RAI chooses to sustain the Italian author cinema, producing movies for TV by renowned authors or by debuting directors, which are, at the same time, aired in television and distributed in the theatres.
I recuperanti (The recoverers) - by Ermanno Olmi; script by Tullio Kezich and Mario Rigoni Stern. In the Forties, a young veteran and an eccentric old man earn a living from the dangerous work to recover remnants of war.[12]
La fine del gioco (The end of the game) – by the debuting Gianni Amelio, with Ugo Gregoretti. A tough kid seems to leave his isolation when he’s chosen by a movie director for a documentary.
Fight for survival – by Renzo Rossellini, ideated and supervised by his father Roberto; 12 episodes. Docufiction about the history of mankind, focused on the scientific and cultural progress.
Il cappello del prete (The hat of the priest) – by Sandro Bolchi, with Luigi Vannucchi, from the Emilio De Marchi’s novel, considered the first Italian detective story; 3 episodes.
I giovedì della signora Giulia (Mrs. Julia Thursdays) – by Paolo Nuzzi and Massimo Scaglione, from the Piero Chiara’s novel, with Claudio Gora and the real-life private eye Tom Ponzi (as a police superintendent); 5 episodes. The vanishing of an upper-class lady is the starting point for an enquiry about the secrets of the Lombard provincial life.
La fantastica storia di Don Chisciotte della Mancia (Don Quijote de la Mancha’s fantastic story) – by Carlo Quartucci, script by Roberto Lerici, from the Miguel de Cervantes’ novel, with Gigi Proietti in the title role; 5 episodes. Aired as a show for children, it’s actually a sophisticated product, taking to television some practices of the avant-garde theatre.[15]
Verso l’avventura (Towards adventure) – by Pino Passalacqua, with Mebratù Maconnen Araia; 14 episodes. Miniseries about the adventures of an Ethiopian kid looking for a treasure.
Qualcuno bussa alla porta (Someone is knocking at the door) – by various directors, written by Tonino Guerra. Cycle of fiveTV movie, dangling between comedy and thriller; all the stories are set in the closed space of an apartment and are variation on the theme of the unexpected visitor.
FBI – Francesco Bertolazzi investigatore – detective comedy, written and interpreted by Ugo Tognazzi as a down-to-heel and clumsy private eye.[16]
Canzonissima 1970 – directed by Romolo Siena, hosted by Corrado Mantoni and Raffaella Carrà (who gets success also as a singer, with the title track Ma che musica maestro). The contest is won by Massimo Ranieri with Vent’anni.[17]
Signore e signora – mix of musical variety and sitcom, with Lando Buzzanca and Delia Scala playing three married couples (a middle-class one, a snobbish one and one of peasants).
Il telecanzoniere – reportage about the Italian pop music, hosted by Sandro Ciotti (more known as sport commentator) [20]
I bambini e noi (Children and us) – reportage by Luigi Comencini about infancy in Italy, in 6 episodes.[21]
Un secolo di lotte contadine in Italia (A century of peasants’ fights in Italy) – historical enquiry by Giorgio Bocca, in one of his very rare collaborations with RAI; in 7 episodes.[22]
Alla ricerca di Tadzio (Looking for Tadzio) – by Luchino Visconti; behind the scenes about the auditions for the choosing of Death in Venice’s young protagonist.
^Spadaro, Damiana. Un testimone del suo tempo. Sergio Zavoli tra giornalismo e letteratura (in Italian). Parma: Università degli Studi di Parma. pp. 266–271.