Berlusconi and the power of television : 2008-11

Power and media are closely linked in any ideological political system, but Italy
under three-term premier Silvio Berlusconi is a case apart. A businessman-turned-politician,
one of the country's wealthiest men and owner of a vast media empire,
Berlusconi became Italy's longest-serving post-war prime minister through
his proficient use of television. While premier, he controlled 90 % of Italy's TV
broadcasting, the best-selling newsweekly, a daily newspaper, over 40 periodicals
and the largest publishing company. The conflicts of interest were rampant.
While it would be simplistic to say that Berlusconi won elections only because
of his control of the media, he did set the agenda by selecting what was relevant
and what was not. This book, based on the author's Ph.D. dissertation, examines
how Berlusconi built his empire and used the media, particularly television, to
achieve and retain political success in a milieu where allegations of corruption,
bribery and links to the Mafia were constant features, and amid his own sexual
scandals. Caricatured by the foreign press as macho, vain and gaffe-prone, the
book examines how he fended off these attacks. Finally, it explores whether
Berlusconi's media-driven political power is a purely Italian phenomenon or a
"model" that could be replicated in other countries.