Three Monkeys Online

A Curious, Alternative Magazine

3Monkeys

Stop it – you'll just encourage them

Friday, November 16th, 2007

You’ll be familiar with the ever-so-slightly desparate attempts by the movie and music industries to convince consumers that bootleg copies of films and music not only rob the industry of vitally needed funds, and provide poor audio visual quality, but also provide funds to organised crime. The ads where a man buys a cheap film […]

Jerk that knee Jerk! Cracking down on the Roma

Monday, November 5th, 2007

Over the long weekend, at the start of this month, Gianfranco Fini (the intelligent and increasingly acceptable face of fascism), declared that no-one should ‘exploit’ the murder of Giovanna Reggiani last week. Fini IIAFFtm said this from the railway station where Ms Reggiani was last seen alive, and went on to blame various members of […]

Primo Levi's Suicide

Saturday, November 3rd, 2007

I stumbled across this fascinating article (thanks to a posting on Chet Raymo’s excellent Science Musings blog. It’s an old article, but was news to this monkey. I had always presumed that it was accepted fact that Primo Levi had committed suicide. Virtually every mention of the celebrated Italian chemist/author/holocaust survivor ends noting that Levi […]

Confusion over the Genoa inquest

Thursday, November 1st, 2007

In the week that the London Metropolitan Police were found guilty of a series of errors that led to the shooting of Jean Charles de Menezes, members of Italy’s ruling coalition voted against holding a committee of enquiry into the conduct of policing at the G8 summitt in Genoa in 2001.

How justice works under Prodi's Government

Sunday, October 21st, 2007

You have to feel sorry for Silvio. While he was in government the European media went to town detailing his every infringement of the democratic norms (of which there were plenty). Since Romano Prodi has been in power scarcely a whimper – for example, how many people outside of Italy know that the current Prime […]

Just what the net needs

Saturday, October 20th, 2007

The government of Romano Prodi, who we were led to believe would role back the counless instances of anti-democratic legislation introduced by Berlusconi, have set their sights on regulating the internet in Italy. A new law, devised by former journalist and long-time Prodi collaborator Ricardo Franco Levi, supposedly has major newspapers and publishers in mind […]

Walter Veltroni – between Gordon Brown, Clinton, and Gore

Sunday, October 14th, 2007

Today, according to most of the centre-left newspapers, we’re witnessing a historic moment. The birth of a new party – the Partito Democratico, along with an american style primary to decide the leader of the party – which will be Rome’s mayor Walter Veltroni. On the official face of it, this is a new begining […]

Dirty Pig

Monday, September 17th, 2007

Roberto Calderoli, ‘honourable’ exponent of the Lega Nord, spent his week dreaming up ways to stop a proposed Mosque being built in Bologna. The mosque has already been the subject of hot debate, given its proposed size (a six thousand metre squared building, on land roughly 52 thousand metres squared) – which is apparently much […]

Cooking the books

Friday, September 14th, 2007

Reading through John Dickie’s highly readable Delizia! – The epic history of the Italians and their food, an episode jumped out involving a conflict of interest that would make modern day politicians – left and right – proud.

Platina, the author of one of the most popular cookbooks of the age (the mid-to-late 1400s), De Honesta voluptate et valetudine (Respectable Pleasure and Good Health), was a leading humanist in Rome, who has left us a good idea of some, perhaps, surprising approaches to cooking in Italy at the time. For example, the use of sugar was widespread, as a seasoning like salt – often being added to what we now consider savoury dishes like Lasagne. The distinction between sweet and savourty is a later invention – in the 1400s celebrity chefs were more concerned with the Galenic theory of the humours. Platina also gives us an idea of the average cooking time for pasta in the 1400s – an hour for vermicelli, and two hours for maccheroni…

The Honourable Members Kick Back

Wednesday, September 12th, 2007

One should perhaps feel grateful after the state broadcaster RAI 1 finally decided to cover Beppe Grillo’s massive V-day protest, two days late. If there’s one thing worse than being talked about… The station’s increasingly confused idea of what ‘news reporting’ is meant that the coverage consisted entirely of two main stream political figures giving […]