January 10: RAI president Letizia Moratti refuses to air Beppe Grillo's ecologist show Energia e informazione, produced by TSI and WDR. The official reason is an unhappy joke comparing Holocaust and gas pollution: "Eichmann gassed three million people for a distorted ideal, Romiti [FIAT general manager] gasses millions people for a bank account".[1]
April 19: at the eve of the political elections, Letizia Moratti resigns as RAI president, after having consolidated the balance sheet of the estate. Giuseppe Morello takes her places ad interim.[2]
July 10: after the victory of The olive tree at the elections, the RAI management is fully renewed. The writer Enzo Siciliano becomes president, Franco Iseppi general director, Liliana Cavani enters in the board of directors. The directors of the three RAI channels and of the news programs are changed too.[4]
September 9: all the RAI TV and radio channels are broadcast satellite by Hotbird.[4]
April 4: Massimo D'Alema, PDS secretary, in full election campaign, visits the Fininvest studios and calls the Berlusconi's estate "a national resource to be saved"; so, he breaks up with the traditional hostility of the Italian left towards the private television.[2]
April 19: at the eve of the elections, on Canale 5 debate between the leaders of the two opposite coalitions, Silvio Berlusconi and Romano Prodi; the match, moderated by Enrico Mentana, ends in a draw.[5]
July 16: Fininvest channels enter in the new society Mediaset, which is listed in the stock exchange with an 8.200 billion liras capital. With the operation, the Berlusconi’s firm reduces its debt level and its dependence by the creditors.[4]
August 28: the decree 444 by the Prodi cabinet prorogues the airing of Rete 4 till to the January 1997. The channel would have to go on satellite, according to a sentence of the Constitutional court.[4]
December 5: Michele Santoro debuts on Italia 1 with the talk show Moby Dick; the first episode arouses many quarrels for a "virtual interview" with Antonio Di Pietro (played by the impersonator Alessandro Villeggia). In the year, other two RAI stars (Paolo Bonolis and Pippo Baudo) pass to Mediaset, but the experience is successful only for Bonolis.[6]
January 3: Italian television enter in the satellite era. debut of DSTV, the first Italian satellite pay-tv. The initial bouquet includes the three Telepiù channels and MTV Europe. In the summer, the offer grows, including also TMC and TMC2, the Italian versions of Cartoon Network and Discovery Channel, BBC News, CNN, ten radio channels and the service +Calcio, allowing to see every match of Serie A.[2]
February 28: the Cecchi Gori group buys the TV right for the Serie A; after complex negotiations, however, in December it resells most of them to RAI.[6]
June 1: Videomusic changes name in TMC2 and gradually turns from music to generalist channel.[4]
The toys entrepreneur Enrico Preziosi gets the direction of Junior TV; the syndication has a restyling and changes name in JTV.
May 9: Pippo Baudo is inquired by the Milan tribunal, with the charge to have received payments off-the-book by the sponsors of his shows; in October, the enquiry involves also Mara Venier and Rosanna Lambertucci, host of a fitness program. In 1998, the three presenters are sentenced for concussion (Baudo to twenty months with probation), but the condemnation does't harm their careers.[7]
June 18: Gigi Sabani, the most popular Italian impersonator, is arrested for sexual harassment. The enquiry, nicknamed "Vallettopoli", involves also the showman Valerio Merola[8] and the TV author Gianni Boncompagni. Also if all the defendants are absolved before the trial, the Sabani's career never recovers by the reputational damage.[6]
November 13: Pippo Baudo is inquired by the Milan tribunal as artistic director of the Sanremo festival; he's accused to have manipulated the contest, favouring the victory of Ron (see over). The charge is not proved.[7]
Special awards: Forum (for the service TV), Campioni di Ballo and Miss Italia, Mrs. Susanna Bastianini (reader of Sorrisi e Canzoni), Joe Pesci (for the cinema in TV), and Mauro Marino (for the radio).
Un posto al sole ("A place in the sun") – italian version of the Australian Neighbours, realized by the Naples RAI production Center and again on air. It is the most popular and longest living Italian soap-opera (26 seasons and around 6000 episodes, till now), the plot, set in an imaginary Naples apartment building (Palazzo Palladini) is characterized by the wide space given to the social themes.[10]
Porta a porta ("Door to door") – talk show hosted by Bruno Vespa; again on air. It's the most followed and influential political program of Italian television; Giulio Andreotti called it "the third House of Italian parliament". However, it had been also hardly criticized, for its tones, often too sensationalistic or parlor, and for the evident Vespa's partiality in favor of Silvio Berlucsconi.[12]
Dio vede e provvede ("God sees and provides") by Enrico Oldoini, spin-off of the two homonym comic TV-movies; 2 seasons. Angela Finocchiaro plays the double role of a prostituted turned in nun and of her scheming twin sister.
Uomini e donne ("Men and women") – reality show hosted by Maria De Filippi; again on air. It begins as a talk-show, with couples talking about their troubles; since 2001, becomes a dating show with a boy or a girl sitting on a throne (the "thronist"[14]) who chooses a partner among a crowd of pretenders; there is also a version with aged protagonists (Throne over). The show, considered by critics a typical example of "trash television", gets the same a durable public success; the format has been exported in Spain and Albany.[15]
Zelig (originally, Facciamo cabaret) – comic show aired from the homonymous cabaret in Milan; again on air. In the years, it has changed more times the title (Zelig circus, Zelig Event, Zelig off) and the hosts (Claudio Bisio, Michelle Hunziker and Vanessa Incontrada were the most active.)[16]
Paperissima sprint – summer version of Paperissima, hosted by Gabibbo; again on air.[17]
Tira e molla ("Push and pull") – quiz of the early evening; 4 seasons. Thanks to the histrionics of the host Paolo Bonolis, the show gets a great public success, but has a noticeable drop in ratings when the conduction passes to Giampiero Ingrassia (son of Ciccio).
Chi mi ha visto? ("Who has seen me?") - celebrative show for the 15 years of the Fininvest televisions, hosted by Emanuela Foliero; 2 seasons.
Galà della pubblicita ("Publicity gala") – award for the best television advertisement; 6 editions.
Il grande bluff ("The big bluff") – candid camera, hosted by Luca Barbareschi and later by Marco Columbro, from a French format; 3 seasons. Barbareschi and, later, other TV stars, intervene disguised to disturb the Mediaset shows.
Sotto a chi tocca ("Who's next?") – talent show among teams representing the Italian regions, hosted by Pippo Franco and Pamela Prati; 2 seasons.
Campioni di ballo ("Dance champions") – talent show about social dance; 4 seasons.
La domenica del villaggio ("The sunday of the village") – travel show about the italian villages and the traditional cuisine, hosted by Davide Mengacci and various female partners; 9 seasons.
Moby Dick – political talk show, hosted by Michele Santoro; 3 seasons. Only program realized by Santoro for Mediaset, it doesn’t repeat the success of the ones for RAI, also if the journalist serves his independence and his populist formula.
However, in this year the Mediaset information bets moreover on the gossip magazines
Verissimo ("Very true") – hosted by Cristina Parodi, Silvia Toffanin and many others, again on air. Born as a chronicle magazine, with the years it has focused more and more on gossip.[18]
Chi c'è… c'è – gossip and fashion magazine, hosted by Silvana Giacobini; 4 seasons.
Papi quotidiani ("Daily Papi") – column of gossip, hosted by Enrico Papi; 2 seasons.
Zap-Zap (TMC) – block programming of cartoons and anime, with various hosts; 5 seasons.
Cartoon network (TMC 2) – block programming of cartoons, hosted by Emanuela Panatta; 2 seasons.
Musica insieme (7 Gold) – dance music show, hosted by Carlo Crocco; again on air in the Piedmonts channel Telecity.
Telegaribaldi (on Naples television Canale 9; 7 seasons) and Seven show (on 7 Gold; 4 seasons); cabaret shows. They launch some comic actors who later have a career on national scope, as Alessandro Siani (Telegaribaldi), Enrico Bertolino and I Fichi d'India (Seven show).
I grandi processi ("The great trials") – cycle of docudramas, care of Sandro Curzi, about the most sensational Italian crime stories.
Ci vediamo in tribunale ("Meet us in the tribunal") – romantic comedy by Domenico Saverni, with Tullio Solenghi and Nancy Brilli. Two lawyers are both lovers and rivals in a divorce proceeding.
Infiltrato – by Claudio Sestrieri, with Valerio Mastrandrea and Barbora Bobulova. A former convict, police informer, tries to redeem himself saving a woman addict.
La tenda nera ("The black curtain") – by Luciano Manuzzi, from a Carlo Lucarelli’s tale, with Luca Barbareschi. A carabiners marshal enquiries about a satanic sect.
Morte di una strega ("Death of a witch") – by Cinzia Th Torrini, from a Laura Toscano's novel, with Remo Girone and Eleonora Giorgi; 2 episodes. The murder of a fortune teller reveals the secrets of a Roman condominium.
Donna – by Gianfranco Giagni, from the radio soap Matilde, with Ottavia Piccolo and Edwige Fenech; 6 episodes. An upper class woman must face the failure of his marriage and the troubles of her sons.
40 minuti con Raffaella ("Forty minutes with Raffaella Carrà") – spin-off of Carramba che sorpresa, aired daily.
Holywood party – by Marcello Cesena, hosted by Maurizio Crozza, with the comic group Broncoviz; variety in 12 episodes, focused on the parody of the cinematographic genres.
Mille lire al mese ("A thousand liras by month") – hosted by Pippo Baudo and Giancarlo Magalli, variety retracing the story of Italian music and way of life in the Twentieth century.
Favola – romantic comedy by Fabrizio De Angelis, inspired to Roman Holyday, with Ambra Angiolini (debuting as actress). It gets a good public success (6 million and half wieners) despite Angiolini herself, the day of the airing, had called it "a bad movie" and invited the spectators to avoid it.
Mediaset airs even 3 TV movies about an innocent escaping from mafia.
Una donna in fuga ("An escaping woman") – by Roberto Rocco, with Maria Michela Mari and Gina Lollobrigida; 2 episodes. A young woman, to avoid the mafia's revenge, assumes the identity of a dead girl.
La signora della citta ("The lady of the town") – by Beppe Cino, from the Silvana Giacobini’s novel, with Barbara Blanc; 2 episodes. Another young woman in the same situation, instead, becomes top model in New York.
Quei due sopra il varano ("Two guys over the varanus") – sitcom written by Antonio Ricci, with Enzo Iachetti and Lello Arena, about the misadventures of an actor and his agent, both not too successful. The title hints to an animals shop under the actor’s apartment.
La febbre del sabato sera ("Saturday night's fever") – one-man show by Fiorello, sided by Maurizio Costanzo.
I guastafeste ("The buzzkills") – mix of variety and candid-camera, hosted by Luca Barbareschi and later by Massimo Lopez. Barbareschi, notorious right-wing sympathizer, is dismissed at the fourth episode, for having invited the audience to not pay the "tax for Europe", wanted by the Prodi cabinet.
Rose rosse ("Red roses") – variety with the Bagaglino troupe.
Telemania – quiz about the story of television, hosted by Mike Bongiorno.
Tutti in piazza ("All in the square") – variety show from the squares of Italian provincial towns, with Gerry Scotti, Alba Parietti and a debuting Enrico Papi.