Who is Viviana Guglielmi, the journalist of Andrea Giambruno’s Fuorionda

In an outlier of his program Diary of the day on Network 4we see a particularly exuberant Andrea Giambruno, the journalist companion of Giorgia Meloni, who moves noisily from one part of the studio to the other, gesticulating, repeating swear words and complaining about someone: «But don’t bother me with the quiff, I’m 42 years old and I have haireveryone in here is bald, so they don’t bother me.”

His tone changes when he approaches his colleague in the studio, pats her on the shoulder and touches her hair. In a lower voice he says to her: «The only opinion that matters to me is Viviana’s», then he compliments her on her «estoril blue» dress and, even if the journalist appears busy and doesn’t pay attention to him, Andrea Giambruno continues: «Are you in a good mood? I was sorry to see you yesterday a little… You are a very intelligent woman, but why didn’t I meet you before…?”.

The embarrassed journalist is called Viviana Guglielmi and works for the Mediaset networks. She was born in Sanremo in 1977 and grew up in the Bergamo area, she has a degree in Communication Sciences and has been registered in the Lombardy Journalists’ Register since June 2009. Her career in television journalism began with sports and entertainment programs. Viviana Guglielmi previously worked at Three antennasto the format Italian bluethen to TeleLombardywhere it led Happy hour. He also collaborated with Inter Channel, Sistal TV And TV Journalto finally arrive at Tgcom24.

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Of himself, in a 2015 interview, he said: «I am passionate about sports. As a young girl I took part in the regional freestyle swimming championships. On TV I never missed an episode of Sports Sunday. And I said to myself: “One day I would like to host a football program”. His model is Candido Cannavò. «I fed on his editorials, his books». When she saw him on television, she appreciated him above all for one reason: «I said to myself: “That’s the right style, staid and profound, never over the top, never a word out of place”».


Source: Vanity Fair

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