In Fiction and Popular Culture
In the classroom Manzoni was filmed a spot on Pocket Coffee which was broadcast on national networks for several years.
The mystery of Cattolica is the name under which it is historically known of the murder Simonetta Ferrero took place July 24, 1971 at the Cattolica University of Milan, yet unresolved. On April 28, 1999 was devoted the third episode of the second series of the television program Blue nightled by Carlo Lucarelli to the mystery of Cattolica.
Read more about this topic: Università Cattolica Del Sacro Cuore
Famous quotes containing the words popular culture, fiction, popular and/or culture:
“The lowest form of popular culturelack of information, misinformation, disinformation, and a contempt for the truth or the reality of most peoples liveshas overrun real journalism. Today, ordinary Americans are being stuffed with garbage.”
—Carl Bernstein (b. 1944)
“We can never safely exceed the actual facts in our narratives. Of pure invention, such as some suppose, there is no instance. To write a true work of fiction even is only to take leisure and liberty to describe some things more exactly as they are.”
—Henry David Thoreau (18171862)
“If they have a popular thought they have to go into a darkened room and lie down until it passes.”
—Kelvin MacKenzie (b. 1946)
“Let a man attain the highest and broadest culture that any American has possessed, then let him die by sea-storm, railroad collision, or other accident, and all America will acquiesce that the best thing has happened to him; that, after the education has gone far, such is the expensiveness of America, that the best use to put a fine person to is to drown him to save his board.”
—Ralph Waldo Emerson (18031882)