Post by account_disabled on Feb 27, 2024 8:57:40 GMT
From the bag company to the meme with Berlusconi who, in full competitive-electoral trance, promises that with his Government there will be no paid bags, but free Prada bags! The controversy following the introduction by law of the new paid biodegradable bags starting from 1 January 2018 involved everyone: from the institutions, to journalists, to large-scale retail trade workers, up to many, many citizens who gave free rein to the imagination by publishing photos, viral content and fake news, in a continuous flow that has only seen some respite in recent days. A battleground, needless to say, is social media, an increasingly megaphone of current affairs and (partisan) feelings in the country.
We'll see what Twitter will tell us about it next year in its usual ThisHappened Panama mobile number list with the top annual trends, but there's no doubt that biodegradable bags are a media sensation . What makes it so? And how did the different actors involved participate? Biodegradable bags media case: what caused the popularity? Virality and fantasy: the wild web draws from art, cinema and music The law on the new bags is a law that responds to a European Union directive to combat polluting plastics, which is why the minimum biodegradability percentage (which must now not be less than 40%) will grow further in the coming years. However, the noble cause is certainly not the reason why many in Italy have mobilized on the web, generating "the bag case". What makes a piece of news a media case? Not only virality , which is the first point, but also the fact that it is capable of generating creativity , of stimulating the imagination, even broadening the initial debate.
Here is a second aspect that works in online communication and that has made the new biodegradable bags so popular . Even TV faces were involved in the debate, increasing the visibility of the story, from Luciana Littizzetto to Maurizio Crozza who dedicated his preview of "Che futuro tempo che fa" to the bag issue, declaring: "I'd rather eat the cabbage from the shelves". But it is on social media that the controversy over paid biodegradable bags has given its best with an irreverent and contagious communication, which has disturbed art and cinema with the hashtag #bags , from the Vertumno dell'Arcimboldo, unrecognizable and covered in barcode labels up to a great classic of 80s cinema, which for the occasion on Instagram became "The time of apples. without the bag". Then there are those who invoke the party of the bags, those who look to the Swiss solution, those who praise the civilization of England, those who scream at the Gomblotto which favors "friends of friends", those who experiment with biodegradability by leaving the bags soaking for two weeks in the bathtub and those who call into question the terrible Pietro Savastano of Gomorrah who orders "Ce ripijamm tutto e sacchett che sò nuostr.
We'll see what Twitter will tell us about it next year in its usual ThisHappened Panama mobile number list with the top annual trends, but there's no doubt that biodegradable bags are a media sensation . What makes it so? And how did the different actors involved participate? Biodegradable bags media case: what caused the popularity? Virality and fantasy: the wild web draws from art, cinema and music The law on the new bags is a law that responds to a European Union directive to combat polluting plastics, which is why the minimum biodegradability percentage (which must now not be less than 40%) will grow further in the coming years. However, the noble cause is certainly not the reason why many in Italy have mobilized on the web, generating "the bag case". What makes a piece of news a media case? Not only virality , which is the first point, but also the fact that it is capable of generating creativity , of stimulating the imagination, even broadening the initial debate.
Here is a second aspect that works in online communication and that has made the new biodegradable bags so popular . Even TV faces were involved in the debate, increasing the visibility of the story, from Luciana Littizzetto to Maurizio Crozza who dedicated his preview of "Che futuro tempo che fa" to the bag issue, declaring: "I'd rather eat the cabbage from the shelves". But it is on social media that the controversy over paid biodegradable bags has given its best with an irreverent and contagious communication, which has disturbed art and cinema with the hashtag #bags , from the Vertumno dell'Arcimboldo, unrecognizable and covered in barcode labels up to a great classic of 80s cinema, which for the occasion on Instagram became "The time of apples. without the bag". Then there are those who invoke the party of the bags, those who look to the Swiss solution, those who praise the civilization of England, those who scream at the Gomblotto which favors "friends of friends", those who experiment with biodegradability by leaving the bags soaking for two weeks in the bathtub and those who call into question the terrible Pietro Savastano of Gomorrah who orders "Ce ripijamm tutto e sacchett che sò nuostr.