TV Talk: Mia Ceran instead of Massimo Bernardini

After 22 years TV Talk change face. Street Massimo Bernardinihistorical face of the program broadcast on Rai3, and inside Mia Ceranlong-time journalist and Rai presenter of programs such as Those who football and the recent In your shoes. This is anticipated by Davide Maggio's blog, which therefore makes Bernardini's desire concrete regarding his succession at the helm of TV Talk. «Who will replace me? I have no idea. I would like it to be a woman, a young presenter who is better than mewhich maintained something of my journalistic passion”, Bernardini said in an interview with Corriere, explaining that he felt the need to leave to dedicate himself to something else.

Mia CeranAlberto Terenghi / ipa-agency.net

Born in 1986, Mia Ceran, in addition to being an esteemed professional, is also a great expert on television mechanisms, also considering that she has often been a guest at TV Talk to share his point of view on current trends and programs. She will have the task of hosting the broadcast, which will continue to count on the historic cast formed by Sebastiano Pucciarelli, Cinzia Bancone and Silvia Motta, to a new level, considering that, as he had also said Dagospiathere are many innovations that the first post-Bernardini edition should include.

Sebastiano Pucciarelli Cinzia Bancone Massimo Bernardini and Silvia Motta
Sebastiano Pucciarelli, Cinzia Bancone, Massimo Bernardini and Silvia MottaAlberto Terenghi / ipa-agency.net

There are those who talk about a possible move to Rai1, of the arrival of a live broadcast – TV Talk is, in fact, recorded – and of the presence of the public with the hope that they will be spared analyststhat is, those very young TV enthusiasts who week after week prepare questions and reflections on the guests who will land in the studio. The last episode of this season is scheduled for May 25th on Rai3: it will be the end of an era and, perhaps, also that of a formal passing of the baton between Bernardini and Ceran, with the hope that the program will continue to represent a bipartisan beacon that allows us to provide a new and original perspective on what the television broadcasts.

Source: Vanity Fair

You may also like