Gad Lerner

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Gad Lerner
Gad Lerner 2010 cropped.jpg
Gad Lerner in 2010
Born (1954-12-07) 7 December 1954 (age 66)
Beirut, Lebanon
OccupationJournalist, writer and tv presenter

Gad Eitan Lerner (Hebrew: גד איתן לרנר‎; born 7 December 1954) is an Italian journalist, writer and TV presenter.

Career[]

In 2000 served as director of news broadcasts TG1 for Rai 1 but he resigned after a selection of pornographic footage was mistakenly aired on prime time during his news broadcast, TG1.[1][2][3] Along with his resignation, he revealed that a politician from National Alliance, Mario Landolfi, who also was the president of the parliamentary commission of vigilance regarding the public TV broadcasting service, asked him to favour an acquaintance of his in the TG1.[4]

In 2001, Gad Lerner participated in the foundation of new Italian TV channel La7, where he was the first director of the news program TG La7 for a short time and after he hosted a weekly talk show L'Infedele until 2012.[5] He left La7 in 2013[6] and has since curated and developed other TV programs, including the talk show Fischia il vento[7] for and a documentary series [8][9] for RAI 3.

In 2010 he was denied visa to Syria, even after his friend and journalist Alix Van Buren defended him: "He often defends the Muslim communities in Italy and their right to have mosques ... he is an independent Jew, who doesn't belong to any lobby ..., he signed a petition written by a group of European Jews which opposes some of the politics of Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu".[10]

In 2007 Gad Lerner was one of the founding members of the Democratic Party in Italy.[11] However, in 2017, Lerner resigned from the Democratic Party in protest against the party's politics over immigration.[12]

Selected bibliography[]

  • 2005: Tu sei un bastardo. Contro l'abuso delle identità (ISBN 978-8807840609).
  • 2009: Scintille. Una storia di anime vagabonde (ISBN 978-8807171789).
  • 2017: Concetta. Una storia operaia (ISBN 978-8807173349).

References[]

External links[]

Media offices
Preceded by
Deputy editor in chief of La Stampa
1993–1996
Succeeded by
Preceded by
Editor in chief of TG1
2000
Succeeded by
New title Host of Otto e mezzo
2001–2002
Succeeded by
New title Host of L'Infedele
2002–2012
Succeeded by
Retrieved from ""