1992 in Italian television

This is a list of Italian television related events from 1992

Events

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In 1992, RAI too is involved in the general crisis of the political system and of the government parties.

  • 19 February: the literary critic Walter Pedullà becomes RAI president.[1]
  • 26 February: during the opening evening of the Sanremo festival, hosted by Pippo Baudo, Crazy Horse (alias Mario Appignani), infamous serial jammer of public events, takes the stage crying “The festival is rigged and Fausto Leali will win it!”, before being moved away by the staff. The prediction doesn't come true: the winner is Luca Barbarossa with Portami a ballare, while Leali gets only the 9th place.[2] The festival is the most seen show of the year, with a peak of 16,6 million viewers for the first evening.[3]
  • March 3: two weeks after the arrest of Mario Chiesa, Bettino Craxi is guest at TG3. The socialist leader, answering to a viewer’s question, calls Chiesa “a scoundrel who casts a shadow on a party that in Milan ... in fifty years never had an administrator sentenced for serious crimes.” Instead, the Mani Pulite enquiry, originated by the Chiesa affair, in the following months spreads like wildfire, overwhelming the whole Italian political system.[4]
  • March 19: the RAI general director Gianni Pasquarelli suspends, for the election time, the magazine Samarcanda, hosted by Michele Santoro, after an episode about the murder of Salvo Lima judged biased. The censorship measure is criticized by the public opinion.[5]
  • April 25: with a TV speech 45 minutes long, Francesco Cossiga announces his resignation as Republic president, two months before the end of his mandate- .[1]
  • 23 May: at 10 PM, in an interlude of the variety show Scommettiamo che..., an extraordinary edition of TG1 announces the death of Giovanni Falcone in the Capaci bombing .[6] Despite the tragic event, RAI chooses to continue the show, against the will of the same host Fabrizio Frizzi (son-in-law of another Mafia victim, Carlo Alberto dalla Chiesa).[7]
  • 25 May: RAI airs from Palermo the burials of the victims; the tears of Rosaria Schifani, widow of a police escort, upset Italy.[8] Paolo Borsellino declares to the TV journalist David Sassoli: "When I picked up Giovanni Falcone's last breaths in my arms, I thought it was just a postponed appointment";[9] On 19 July, Borsellino is in turn killed in the Via D’Amelio bombing.
  • 11 July: RAI broadcasts live Puccini’s Tosca from the real places in Rome. at the same hours when the story proceeds. The show is directed by Giuseppe Patroni-Griffi, and played by Catherine Malfitano, Placido Domingo and Ruggero Raimondi.[1]
  • 26 September: Bruno Vespa, TG1 director, is impeached by his journalists for having called Christian Democracy "my publisher of reference".
  • 21 December: first issue of TGR Leonardo, RAI scientific news program, care of TGR Piedmont.

Fininvest

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  • 13 January: on Canale 5, debut of TG5, the first Finivest news program, directed by Enrico Mentana and hosted, besides the same Mentana, by Cristina Parodi and Cesara Buonamici. The first edition is troubled by several technical problems but is gratified by a greeting message from London of the president Francesco Cossiga. Soon, the Canale 5 journal, focused on current news instead of politic and conducted by Mentana with a pressing rhythm, becomes a serious competitor for the high-flown RAI news programs.[10]
  • 17 February: the sex education program Lezioni d'amore, with Giuliano Ferrara and his wife Anselma dell'Olio, is moved to the late evening, and then cancelled, following the protests of the DC newspaper Il popolo; it is one of the latest cases of sex-related TV censorship in Italy.[11]
  • 30 July: Gianfranco Funari leaves Fininvest due to disagreements with Silvio Berlusconi, because the presenter's populis stances.[12]
  • 20 October: for the first time, Fininvest gets the TV rights for Giro d’Italia.

Other channels

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  • 29 March: the sporting thematic channel Tele+2 (of the TELE+ group) begins the crypted broadcastings.
  • 16 May: Il Moro challenge team, sponsored by Raoul Gardini and Montedison, loses the America's Cup final against America3; it is still the best result ever achieved by an Italian boat. Telemontecarlo (also owned by Gardini) had broadcast all Il Moro di Venezia’s regattas, arousing in Italy an unprecedented interest for sailing.[13]
  • 25 July-9 August : TMC achieves another success in the field of sports information, dedicating 16 hours a day to the Barcelona Summer Olympics; critics judge his coverage of the event professionally much superior to the one offered by RAI.[13]
  • 13 August : Mammì law comes into force. The three Fininvest networks, Rete A and Videomusic gets the national concession, TMC, Retecapri, Retemia and Tele+ a provisional authorization; more than 1200 smaller TV stations surveyed in 1990 coucan continue to broadcast locally.[1]
  • 24 August: Retemia is declared bankrupt precisely when Giorgio Mendella was headed abroad. It aired a half-hour loop of a message saying "dreams can be interrupted depending on the intensity of the storm that awoke you, but unlike reality, dreams always return; we believe in that".[14]
  • 30 September: the syndication TV7 Pathè ends broadcasting because the bankrupt of the edior Giancarlo Parretti.[15]

Awards

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9. Telegatto award, for the season 1991-1992.

Debuts

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Serials

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  • Cinico TV – by Ciprì & Maresco, series of black-and-white shorts, hosted in various other programs; 4 seasons. The series, set in the Palermo suburbia and with freakish characters, is inspired, as the future films of the two authors, by a dark and upsetting humour.[16]

Variety

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  • DopoFestival – talk show commenting the Sanremo music festival; ideated by Pippo Baudo, it’s again on air.[17]
  • Unomattina Estate – morning show of the summer hosted by Amedeo Goria and many others, lasted till 2025.[18]
  • Porca miseria – game show about home economics, with Fabio Fazio; the competitors have to make ends meet with their family budget, rejecting the temptation to resort to illegal means; 2 seasons.
  • Il canzoniere dell'anno – contest among the winners of the principal Italian music shows of the year; 2 seasons.

News and educational

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  • Milano, Italia – political talk show, broadcast from Milan and hosted initially by Gad Lerner, 2 seasons; it's now a precious document about the season of Mani Pulite and the Mafia bombings.[19]
  • Il rosso e il nero - political talk show, with Michele Santoro; 2 seasons.
  • Nel regno degli animali (In the animals’ kingdom) – with Giorgio Celli, lasted (with various titles) till 2006.
  • Prossimo tuo – religious magazine, with father Giovanni D’Ercole, lasted till 2002.

Fininvest

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Serials

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Variety

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  • Amici – talk show with young people as guests and public, hosted by Lella Costa and, from the second edition, by the debuting Maria De Filippi; lasted till 2001, with a spin-off (Amici di sera).
  • Karaokekaraoke contest from the squares of various Italian towns, hosted by Fiorello and later by his brother Giuseppe; 3 seasons more a restart in 2015.[21]
  • Canzoni sotto l'albero (Songs under the tree) – musical Christmas show, with children as contenders, hosted by Rita Dalla Chiesa and others; 9 seasons.
  • La sai l’ultima? (Do you know the latest story?) – contest of joke tellers, with various hosts (Gerry Scotti and Natalia Estrada the most active); 11 seasons and 6 spin-offs.[22]
  • Scherzi a parte (All kiddings aside) – candid camera show, with various hosts (Teo Teocoli the most active) and known personalities as the victims of the jokes; 14 seasons and 8 spin-offs or special editions.[23]
  • Bellissimabeauty pageant, with various hosts, Fininvenst’s answer to RAI’s Miss italia; 5 seasons.
  • Lingo - with Tiberio Timperi, Italian version of the USA format; again on air on La 7.
  • Lui, lei, l'altro – reality show, with Marco Balestri; the three members of a love triangle confront on video; lasted till 1994.
  • Luna di miele - with Gabriella Carlucci, Italian version of the Dutch format Honeymoon quiz; game-show with three couples of newlyweds as contenders, 2 seasons.
  • Occhio allo specchio! (Care the mirror!) – candid camera show with Paolo Bonolis; 3 seasons.
  • Tutti × uno - game show with Mike Bongiorno, Italian version of Family feud; 2 seasons.
  • Unomania – block programming, aimed to the young people, with various hosts ; lasted till 1994.

News and educational

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  • A tutto volume – books magazine, with a lively and unconventional tone, hosted by Alessandra Casella, then by Daria Bignardi; 3 seasons.
  • Sgarbi quotidiani – daily column with Vittorio Sgarbi, characterized by an extreme verbal violence; lasted till 1999 on Finininvest and till 2007 on minor networks.

Other channels

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  • Amici mostri (Monsters friends) – show for children, with Fulvio Falzarano and Alessia Marcuzzi; 2 seasons (TMC).
  • Informatica VideoMagazine – magazine about computer; 2 seasons (Telecampione).
  • Roxy Bar – musical program with Red Ronnie (Videomusic ; after being transmigrated on TMC and the web, actually it is on air on San Marino RTV)

Shows of the year

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Dramas

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Miniseries

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Serials

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Variety

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  • Su la testa! (Up your head!) – satirical show broadcast from the Baggio tent-theatre. The host Paolo Rossi (at his TV debut) is sided by several stand-up comedians coming from the Zelig cabaret, as Aldo, Giovanni e Giacomo.[25]
  • Partita doppia - twice-weekly show with Pippo Baudo.
  • Svalutation - musical show with Adriano Celentano.
  • Alta classe - care of Gianni Minà, musical variety about the history of La bussola, the most famous  Italian nightclub.
  • Acqua calda (Hot water) – Sunday show, with Nino Frassica and Giorgio Faletti.
  • Avanspettacolo, with Franco and Ciccio; last role for Franco Franchi, who must leave the show for his bad health.
  • Il canzoniere delle feste (The winter holydasys songbook) – with Loretta Goggi.
  • Caro Totò, ti voglio presentare... (Dear Totò, I would introduce you...) – with Renzo Arbore, celebrative show for the 25th anniversary of Totò’s death.
  • Ci siamo!?! – talent show with Gigi Sabani.
  • Detto tra noi mattina – morning magazine, with Mita Medici and Luca Sardella.
  • Ora di punta – broadcast simultaneously on TV and radio before the evening news program, with Mara Venier and Federico Fazzuoli.
  • Telegiornale zero – satirical news program, with Piero Chiambretti.

News and educational

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Fininvest

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Drama

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Miniseries

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Variety

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News and educational

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  • Istinti, l’altra faccia della cronaca (Instincts, other face of chronicle) – reportage about the theme of violence by Mimmo Lombezzi and Elena Caputo, with often harsh but not gratuitous images.
  • Lezioni d'amore - sex education program with Giuliano Ferrara (see over).

For children

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Othe channels

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Ending this year

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  • Le altre notti
  • Azzurro
  • Bellezze sulla neve
  • Calciomania
  • Cari genitori
  • Ci vediamo
  • Colpo grosso
  • Il commissario Corso
  • Creme caramel
  • Festa di compleanno
  • Il gioco delle coppie
  • Hot line
  • Piacere Taiuno
  • La più bella sei tu
  • Profondo Nord
  • Pronto socorso
  • Samarcanda
  • Telefono giallo
  • Telemike
  • Il Tg delle vacanze
  • TG1 – Tre minuti di…
  • I vicini di casa
  • Una vita in gioco

Deaths

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  • 18 March: Mario Landi (71), director.
  • 29 September: Antonello Marescalchi, (62), journalist, RAI correspondant from New York.
  • 9 December: Franco Franchi, (64), comic actor.
  • 18 December: Franco Amurri, (67), author.

References

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  1. 1 2 3 4 Bruno, Somalvico (25 October 2012). "cronologia radiotelevisiva III: 1976-1992: 1986-1992". cronologia radiotelevisiva III. Retrieved 2026-06-08.
  2. "Sanremo Follie - 1992: Mario Appignani detto Cavallo Pazzo - Video". RaiPlay (in Italian). Retrieved 2021-01-21.
  3. Hit (2010-09-02). "Auditel Rewind - 1992". TvBlog (in Italian). Retrieved 2026-06-03.
  4. "Mani pulite: cronache da un'inchiesta". RaiPlay (in Italian). Retrieved 2022-02-11.
  5. Marino, Carmine (2022). "Lo schermo e la piazza: la crisi e il tramonto della Prima repubblica raccontati da Samarcanda". Diacronie. 49 (1).
  6. "Memorie - Fatti e persone da ricordare - TG1 Edizione straordinaria 23/05/1992 - Video". RaiPlay (in Italian). Retrieved 2021-01-21.
  7. "La strage di Capaci e "Scommettiamo che": il filo che lega Frizzi alla Sicilia". la Repubblica (in Italian). 2018-03-26. Retrieved 2021-01-21.
  8. ergrillodermarchese (22 May 2012). "Io vi perdono, però vi dovete mettere in ginocchio". YouTube. Retrieved 21 January 2021.
  9. "Le parole di Borsellino - S1992 - Borsellino una settimana dopo la morte di Falcone - Video". RaiPlay (in Italian). Retrieved 2021-01-21.
  10. "TG5, ventotto anni fa la". www.agenziavideo.it (in Italian). Retrieved 2021-01-19.
  11. Tripi, Vito (2025-05-28). "Anselma Dell'Olio una vita per il cinema tra Fellini, Ferreri, Zeffirelli passando per Gustavo Rol". Plusnews (in Italian). Retrieved 2026-05-26.
  12. "Nonsolobiografie.it - Biografia Gianfranco Funari". www.nonsolobiografie.it. Retrieved 2026-06-08.
  13. 1 2 Grasso, Aldo (2004). Storia della televisione italiana (New updated ed.). Milan: Garzanti. ISBN 9788811740315.
  14. Emanuelli, Massimo (2017-08-19). "Retemia". MASSIMO EMANUELLI (in Italian). Retrieved 2026-01-28.
  15. Emanuelli, Massimo (2017-11-29). "Tv7 Pathè". MASSIMO EMANUELLI (in Italian). Retrieved 2026-06-09.
  16. "Cinico TV". RaiPlay (in Italian). Retrieved 2022-04-01.
  17. "DopoFestival - Puntate". RaiPlay (in Italian). Retrieved 2026-06-16.
  18. "Unomattina Estate". RaiPlay (in Italian). Retrieved 2026-06-22.
  19. "Milano, Italia". RaiPlay (in Italian). Retrieved 2021-01-21.
  20. "Gommapiuma". Mediaset Play. Archived from the original on 2020-09-02. Retrieved 2021-03-03.
  21. "Karaoke". Mediaset Play. Archived from the original on 2018-09-11. Retrieved 2021-01-21.
  22. "La sai l'ultima?". Mediaset Play. Retrieved 2021-01-21.
  23. "Sei su scherzi a parte". Mediaset Play. Retrieved 2021-01-21.
  24. "Un inviato molto speciale". RaiPlay (in Italian). Retrieved 2023-07-26.
  25. "Su la testa!". RaiPlay (in Italian). Retrieved 2021-01-21.
  26. 1 2 "Rai Uno". www.rai.it. Retrieved 2026-05-26.
  27. Fantaghirò 2: Fantaghirò 2 Video, retrieved 2021-01-26
  28. Cau, Salvatore (2019-06-24). "Chiusi per Flop: l'agonia «Senza Fine» di «Camilla, parlami d'amore»". Davide Maggio (in Italian). Retrieved 2026-05-27.
  29. Lucky Luke - La serie (in Italian). Retrieved 2026-06-22 via mediasetinfinity.mediaset.it.