Mario Magnotta

Mario Magnotta
Born October 14, 1942
Pieve di Teco, Liguria
Died January 4, 2009(2009-01-04) (aged 66)
L'Aquila, Abruzzo
Nationality Italian
Occupation School janitor
Known for Internet celebrity

Mario Magnotta (October 14, 1942 – January 4, 2009) was an Italian janitor of a commercial school in L'Aquila. He became very known in Italy[1] after several prank calls by some former students of the institute were circulated on the Internet.

Biography

Born in Pieve di Teco, the son of Giovanni Magnotta and Romilda Siconolfi, his family moved to L'Aquila from the province of Imperia because of work in 1945.

Prank calls

Mario Magnotta was already famous when there was no internet, by word of mouth and through the duplication and the sharing of cassette tapes. Years later, his fame (thanks to the Internet) has increased even more. Some years after the pranks took place (in 1986–1987), the pranksters digitized the recordings and shared them on the Internet. In time Mario Magnotta's fame spread all over Italy. The success on the website was principally due to the rage and the use of blasphemies by Mr. Magnotta, and to his "Aquilano dialect", the most important variant of Sabino dialect, considered the standard form of it and which sounds very amusing to internauts.[2] The phone jokes had three topics:

The fame

After the fame on the Web (with the url www.magnotta.it), he was twice invited to some talk-shows on Italian television RAI, and suddenly invited to some local events dedicated to him. During a concert of Antonello Venditti in L'Aquila, Magnotta was invited on the scene by the singer, who was curious to know him. The Italian singer Simone Cristicchi, winner of the 2007 edition of Festival di Sanremo, dedicated to him a verse of his song "L'Italia di Piero" (The Italy of Piero): «Piero non rinuncerebbe mai alla lotta, e si iscrive ai terroristi come fa il Magnotta» («Piero would never give up combat, and he "signs up to the terrorists" like Magnotta did»[3])

Death

Mario Magnotta died in January 2009 in L'Aquila of a pulmonary embolism.[4] In 2012 the municipal council of L'Aquila decided to dedicate a city street to him.[1]

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 3/31/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.