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  • CHIETI, ITALY - 18 SEPTEMBER 2019: Dario Marrocco (49), the first lawyer to successfully use Right To Be Forgotten to have an article removed from a news website in Italy, poses for a portrait in his studio in Chieti, Italy, on September 18th 2019.<br />
<br />
The closure of  the Italian news webbsite "Prima Da Noi", as a result of the European privacy law Right To Be Forgotten provides a cautionary about challenges of internet regulation.
    CIPG_20190918_NYT-RightToBeForgotten...jpg
  • CHIETI, ITALY - 18 SEPTEMBER 2019: Dario Marrocco (49), the first lawyer to successfully use Right To Be Forgotten to have an article removed from a news website in Italy, poses for a portrait in his studio in Chieti, Italy, on September 18th 2019.<br />
<br />
The closure of  the Italian news webbsite "Prima Da Noi", as a result of the European privacy law Right To Be Forgotten provides a cautionary about challenges of internet regulation.
    CIPG_20190918_NYT-RightToBeForgotten...jpg
  • PESCARA, ITALY - 18 SEPTEMBER 2019: Matteo Cavallucci (46), lawyer of Alessandro Biancardi - who closed down his website last year amid mountain legal costs and demands that he remove old articles by individuals citing the Right To Be Forgotten law - poses for a portrait in Pescara, Italy, on September 18th 2019.<br />
<br />
The closure of  the Italian news webbsite "Prima Da Noi", as a result of the European privacy law Right To Be Forgotten provides a cautionary about challenges of internet regulation.
    CIPG_20190918_NYT-RightToBeForgotten...jpg
  • CHIETI, ITALY - 18 SEPTEMBER 2019: Dario Marrocco (49), the first lawyer to successfully use Right To Be Forgotten to have an article removed from a news website in Italy, poses for a portrait in his studio in Chieti, Italy, on September 18th 2019.<br />
<br />
The closure of  the Italian news webbsite "Prima Da Noi", as a result of the European privacy law Right To Be Forgotten provides a cautionary about challenges of internet regulation.
    CIPG_20190918_NYT-RightToBeForgotten...jpg
  • CHIETI, ITALY - 18 SEPTEMBER 2019: Dario Marrocco (49), the first lawyer to successfully use Right To Be Forgotten to have an article removed from a news website in Italy, poses for a portrait in his studio in Chieti, Italy, on September 18th 2019.<br />
<br />
The closure of  the Italian news webbsite "Prima Da Noi", as a result of the European privacy law Right To Be Forgotten provides a cautionary about challenges of internet regulation.
    CIPG_20190918_NYT-RightToBeForgotten...jpg
  • PESCARA, ITALY - 18 SEPTEMBER 2019: Matteo Cavallucci (46), lawyer of Alessandro Biancardi - who closed down his website last year amid mountain legal costs and demands that he remove old articles by individuals citing the Right To Be Forgotten law - poses for a portrait in Pescara, Italy, on September 18th 2019.<br />
<br />
The closure of  the Italian news webbsite "Prima Da Noi", as a result of the European privacy law Right To Be Forgotten provides a cautionary about challenges of internet regulation.
    CIPG_20190918_NYT-RightToBeForgotten...jpg
  • PESCARA, ITALY - 18 SEPTEMBER 2019: Matteo Cavallucci (46), lawyer of Alessandro Biancardi - who closed down his website last year amid mountain legal costs and demands that he remove old articles by individuals citing the Right To Be Forgotten law - poses for a portrait in Pescara, Italy, on September 18th 2019.<br />
<br />
The closure of  the Italian news webbsite "Prima Da Noi", as a result of the European privacy law Right To Be Forgotten provides a cautionary about challenges of internet regulation.
    CIPG_20190918_NYT-RightToBeForgotten...jpg
  • PESCARA, ITALY - 18 SEPTEMBER 2019: Matteo Cavallucci (46), lawyer of Alessandro Biancardi - who closed down his website last year amid mountain legal costs and demands that he remove old articles by individuals citing the Right To Be Forgotten law - poses for a portrait in Pescara, Italy, on September 18th 2019.<br />
<br />
The closure of  the Italian news webbsite "Prima Da Noi", as a result of the European privacy law Right To Be Forgotten provides a cautionary about challenges of internet regulation.
    CIPG_20190918_NYT-RightToBeForgotten...jpg
  • CHIETI, ITALY - 18 SEPTEMBER 2019: Dario Marrocco (49), the first lawyer to successfully use Right To Be Forgotten to have an article removed from a news website in Italy, poses for a portrait in his studio in Chieti, Italy, on September 18th 2019.<br />
<br />
The closure of  the Italian news webbsite "Prima Da Noi", as a result of the European privacy law Right To Be Forgotten provides a cautionary about challenges of internet regulation.
    CIPG_20190918_NYT-RightToBeForgotten...jpg
  • PESCARA, ITALY - 18 SEPTEMBER 2019: Matteo Cavallucci (46), lawyer of Alessandro Biancardi - who closed down his website last year amid mountain legal costs and demands that he remove old articles by individuals citing the Right To Be Forgotten law - poses for a portrait in Pescara, Italy, on September 18th 2019.<br />
<br />
The closure of  the Italian news webbsite "Prima Da Noi", as a result of the European privacy law Right To Be Forgotten provides a cautionary about challenges of internet regulation.
    CIPG_20190918_NYT-RightToBeForgotten...jpg
  • PESCARA, ITALY - 18 SEPTEMBER 2019: A view of the restaurant Positano, the site of the stabbing episode that helped contribute to Mr. Biancardi's downfall, is seen here in Pescara, Italy, on September 18th 2019.<br />
<br />
The closure of  the Italian news webbsite "Prima Da Noi", as a result of the European privacy law Right To Be Forgotten provides a cautionary about challenges of internet regulation.
    CIPG_20190918_NYT-RightToBeForgotten...jpg
  • PESCARA, ITALY - 18 SEPTEMBER 2019: Paolo Sardini (50), the attorney representing Vittorio Pecoraro - who successfully sued Alessandro Biancardi to have an article removed about a stabbing incident between him and his brother at his restaurant Positano -poses for a portrait in his studio in Pescara, Italy, on September 18th 2019.<br />
<br />
The closure of  the Italian news webbsite "Prima Da Noi", as a result of the European privacy law Right To Be Forgotten provides a cautionary about challenges of internet regulation.
    CIPG_20190918_NYT-RightToBeForgotten...jpg
  • PESCARA, ITALY - 18 SEPTEMBER 2019: Paolo Sardini (50), the attorney representing Vittorio Pecoraro - who successfully sued Alessandro Biancardi to have an article removed about a stabbing incident between him and his brother at his restaurant Positano -poses for a portrait in his studio in Pescara, Italy, on September 18th 2019.<br />
<br />
The closure of  the Italian news webbsite "Prima Da Noi", as a result of the European privacy law Right To Be Forgotten provides a cautionary about challenges of internet regulation.
    CIPG_20190918_NYT-RightToBeForgotten...jpg
  • PESCARA, ITALY - 18 SEPTEMBER 2019: A mural of the Italian poet Gabriele D'Annunzio, originally from Pescara, is seen here in the historical center of Pescara, Italy, on September 18th 2019.<br />
<br />
The closure of  the Italian news webbsite "Prima Da Noi", as a result of the European privacy law Right To Be Forgotten provides a cautionary about challenges of internet regulation.
    CIPG_20190918_NYT-RightToBeForgotten...jpg
  • PESCARA, ITALY - 17 SEPTEMBER 2019: A view of the restaurant Positano, the site of the stabbing episode that helped contribute to Mr. Biancardi's downfall, is seen here in Pescara, Italy, on September 17th 2019.<br />
<br />
The closure of  the Italian news webbsite "Prima Da Noi", as a result of the European privacy law Right To Be Forgotten provides a cautionary about challenges of internet regulation.
    CIPG_20190917_NYT-RightToBeForgotten...jpg
  • PESCARA, ITALY - 17 SEPTEMBER 2019: (R-L) Alessandro Biancardi (47), former editor of "Prima di Noi", and his wife Alessandra Lotti (39) pose for a portrait in front of the courthouse of Pescara, Italy, on September 17th 2019.<br />
<br />
Alessandro Biancardi closed down his website last year amid mountain legal costs and demands that he remove old articles by individuals citing the Right To Be Forgotten law.<br />
<br />
The closure of  the Italian news webbsite "Prima Da Noi", as a result of the European privacy law Right To Be Forgotten provides a cautionary about challenges of internet regulation.
    CIPG_20190917_NYT-RightToBeForgotten...jpg
  • PESCARA, ITALY - 17 SEPTEMBER 2019: (R-L) Alessandro Biancardi (47), former editor of "Prima di Noi", and his wife Alessandra Lotti (39) pose for a portrait in front of the courthouse of Pescara, Italy, on September 17th 2019.<br />
<br />
Alessandro Biancardi closed down his website last year amid mountain legal costs and demands that he remove old articles by individuals citing the Right To Be Forgotten law.<br />
<br />
The closure of  the Italian news webbsite "Prima Da Noi", as a result of the European privacy law Right To Be Forgotten provides a cautionary about challenges of internet regulation.
    CIPG_20190917_NYT-RightToBeForgotten...jpg
  • PESCARA, ITALY - 18 SEPTEMBER 2019: A view of the restaurant Positano, the site of the stabbing episode that helped contribute to Mr. Biancardi's downfall, is seen here in Pescara, Italy, on September 18th 2019.<br />
<br />
The closure of  the Italian news webbsite "Prima Da Noi", as a result of the European privacy law Right To Be Forgotten provides a cautionary about challenges of internet regulation.
    CIPG_20190918_NYT-RightToBeForgotten...jpg
  • PESCARA, ITALY - 18 SEPTEMBER 2019: Paolo Sardini (50), the attorney representing Vittorio Pecoraro - who successfully sued Alessandro Biancardi to have an article removed about a stabbing incident between him and his brother at his restaurant Positano -poses for a portrait in his studio in Pescara, Italy, on September 18th 2019.<br />
<br />
The closure of  the Italian news webbsite "Prima Da Noi", as a result of the European privacy law Right To Be Forgotten provides a cautionary about challenges of internet regulation.
    CIPG_20190918_NYT-RightToBeForgotten...jpg
  • PESCARA, ITALY - 18 SEPTEMBER 2019: Paolo Sardini (50), the attorney representing Vittorio Pecoraro - who successfully sued Alessandro Biancardi to have an article removed about a stabbing incident between him and his brother at his restaurant Positano -poses for a portrait in his studio in Pescara, Italy, on September 18th 2019.<br />
<br />
The closure of  the Italian news webbsite "Prima Da Noi", as a result of the European privacy law Right To Be Forgotten provides a cautionary about challenges of internet regulation.
    CIPG_20190918_NYT-RightToBeForgotten...jpg
  • PESCARA, ITALY - 18 SEPTEMBER 2019: Paolo Sardini (50), the attorney representing Vittorio Pecoraro - who successfully sued Alessandro Biancardi to have an article removed about a stabbing incident between him and his brother at his restaurant Positano -poses for a portrait in his studio in Pescara, Italy, on September 18th 2019.<br />
<br />
The closure of  the Italian news webbsite "Prima Da Noi", as a result of the European privacy law Right To Be Forgotten provides a cautionary about challenges of internet regulation.
    CIPG_20190918_NYT-RightToBeForgotten...jpg
  • PESCARA, ITALY - 18 SEPTEMBER 2019: A man is seen here walking back from the beach in Pescara, Italy, on September 18th 2019.<br />
<br />
The closure of  the Italian news webbsite "Prima Da Noi", as a result of the European privacy law Right To Be Forgotten provides a cautionary about challenges of internet regulation.
    CIPG_20190918_NYT-RightToBeForgotten...jpg
  • PESCARA, ITALY - 18 SEPTEMBER 2019: An elderly man is seen here riding his bike in Pescara, Italy, on September 18th 2019.<br />
<br />
The closure of  the Italian news webbsite "Prima Da Noi", as a result of the European privacy law Right To Be Forgotten provides a cautionary about challenges of internet regulation.
    CIPG_20190918_NYT-RightToBeForgotten...jpg
  • PESCARA, ITALY - 18 SEPTEMBER 2019: An elderly man is seen here riding his bike in Pescara, Italy, on September 18th 2019.<br />
<br />
The closure of  the Italian news webbsite "Prima Da Noi", as a result of the European privacy law Right To Be Forgotten provides a cautionary about challenges of internet regulation.
    CIPG_20190918_NYT-RightToBeForgotten...jpg
  • PESCARA, ITALY - 18 SEPTEMBER 2019: A boat is seen here in Pescara, Italy, on September 18th 2019.<br />
<br />
The closure of  the Italian news webbsite "Prima Da Noi", as a result of the European privacy law Right To Be Forgotten provides a cautionary about challenges of internet regulation.
    CIPG_20190918_NYT-RightToBeForgotten...jpg
  • PESCARA, ITALY - 18 SEPTEMBER 2019: Resident of Pescara are seen here in Pescara, Italy, on September 18th 2019.<br />
<br />
The closure of  the Italian news webbsite "Prima Da Noi", as a result of the European privacy law Right To Be Forgotten provides a cautionary about challenges of internet regulation.
    CIPG_20190918_NYT-RightToBeForgotten...jpg
  • PESCARA, ITALY - 18 SEPTEMBER 2019: Resident of Pescara are seen here in Pescara, Italy, on September 18th 2019.<br />
<br />
The closure of  the Italian news webbsite "Prima Da Noi", as a result of the European privacy law Right To Be Forgotten provides a cautionary about challenges of internet regulation.
    CIPG_20190918_NYT-RightToBeForgotten...jpg
  • PESCARA, ITALY - 18 SEPTEMBER 2019: A view of Pescara, Italy, on September 18th 2019.<br />
<br />
The closure of  the Italian news webbsite "Prima Da Noi", as a result of the European privacy law Right To Be Forgotten provides a cautionary about challenges of internet regulation.
    CIPG_20190918_NYT-RightToBeForgotten...jpg
  • PESCARA, ITALY - 17 SEPTEMBER 2019: A view of the restaurant Positano, the site of the stabbing episode that helped contribute to Mr. Biancardi's downfall, is seen here in Pescara, Italy, on September 17th 2019.<br />
<br />
The closure of  the Italian news webbsite "Prima Da Noi", as a result of the European privacy law Right To Be Forgotten provides a cautionary about challenges of internet regulation.
    CIPG_20190917_NYT-RightToBeForgotten...jpg
  • PESCARA, ITALY - 17 SEPTEMBER 2019: (L-R) Alessandro Biancardi (47), former editor of "Prima di Noi", and his wife Alessandra Lotti (39) pose for a portrait in front of the courthouse of Pescara, Italy, on September 17th 2019.<br />
<br />
Alessandro Biancardi closed down his website last year amid mountain legal costs and demands that he remove old articles by individuals citing the Right To Be Forgotten law.<br />
<br />
The closure of  the Italian news webbsite "Prima Da Noi", as a result of the European privacy law Right To Be Forgotten provides a cautionary about challenges of internet regulation.
    CIPG_20190917_NYT-RightToBeForgotten...jpg
  • PESCARA, ITALY - 17 SEPTEMBER 2019: (L-R) Alessandro Biancardi (47), former editor of "Prima di Noi", and his wife Alessandra Lotti (39) pose for a portrait in front of the courthouse of Pescara, Italy, on September 17th 2019.<br />
<br />
Alessandro Biancardi closed down his website last year amid mountain legal costs and demands that he remove old articles by individuals citing the Right To Be Forgotten law.<br />
<br />
The closure of  the Italian news webbsite "Prima Da Noi", as a result of the European privacy law Right To Be Forgotten provides a cautionary about challenges of internet regulation.
    CIPG_20190917_NYT-RightToBeForgotten...jpg
  • PESCARA, ITALY - 17 SEPTEMBER 2019: (R-L) Alessandro Biancardi (47), former editor of "Prima di Noi", and his wife Alessandra Lotti (39) pose for a portrait in front of the courthouse of Pescara, Italy, on September 17th 2019.<br />
<br />
Alessandro Biancardi closed down his website last year amid mountain legal costs and demands that he remove old articles by individuals citing the Right To Be Forgotten law.<br />
<br />
The closure of  the Italian news webbsite "Prima Da Noi", as a result of the European privacy law Right To Be Forgotten provides a cautionary about challenges of internet regulation.
    CIPG_20190917_NYT-RightToBeForgotten...jpg
  • PESCARA, ITALY - 17 SEPTEMBER 2019: (L-R) Alessandro Biancardi (47), former editor of "Prima di Noi", and his wife Alessandra Lotti (39) pose for a portrait in front of the courthouse of Pescara, Italy, on September 17th 2019.<br />
<br />
Alessandro Biancardi closed down his website last year amid mountain legal costs and demands that he remove old articles by individuals citing the Right To Be Forgotten law.<br />
<br />
The closure of  the Italian news webbsite "Prima Da Noi", as a result of the European privacy law Right To Be Forgotten provides a cautionary about challenges of internet regulation.
    CIPG_20190917_NYT-RightToBeForgotten...jpg
  • PESCARA, ITALY - 17 SEPTEMBER 2019: (L-R) Alessandro Biancardi (47), former editor of "Prima di Noi", and his wife Alessandra Lotti (39) pose for a portrait in front of the courthouse of Pescara, Italy, on September 17th 2019.<br />
<br />
Alessandro Biancardi closed down his website last year amid mountain legal costs and demands that he remove old articles by individuals citing the Right To Be Forgotten law.<br />
<br />
The closure of  the Italian news webbsite "Prima Da Noi", as a result of the European privacy law Right To Be Forgotten provides a cautionary about challenges of internet regulation.
    CIPG_20190917_NYT-RightToBeForgotten...jpg
  • PESCARA, ITALY - 17 SEPTEMBER 2019: (L-R) Alessandro Biancardi (47), former editor of "Prima di Noi", and his wife Alessandra Lotti (39) pose for a portrait in front of the courthouse of Pescara, Italy, on September 17th 2019.<br />
<br />
Alessandro Biancardi closed down his website last year amid mountain legal costs and demands that he remove old articles by individuals citing the Right To Be Forgotten law.<br />
<br />
The closure of  the Italian news webbsite "Prima Da Noi", as a result of the European privacy law Right To Be Forgotten provides a cautionary about challenges of internet regulation.
    CIPG_20190917_NYT-RightToBeForgotten...jpg
  • PESCARA, ITALY - 17 SEPTEMBER 2019: (L-R) Alessandro Biancardi (47), former editor of "Prima di Noi", and his wife Alessandra Lotti (39) pose for a portrait in front of the courthouse of Pescara, Italy, on September 17th 2019.<br />
<br />
Alessandro Biancardi closed down his website last year amid mountain legal costs and demands that he remove old articles by individuals citing the Right To Be Forgotten law.<br />
<br />
The closure of  the Italian news webbsite "Prima Da Noi", as a result of the European privacy law Right To Be Forgotten provides a cautionary about challenges of internet regulation.
    CIPG_20190917_NYT-RightToBeForgotten...jpg
  • PESCARA, ITALY - 17 SEPTEMBER 2019: (L-R) Alessandro Biancardi (47), former editor of "Prima di Noi", and his wife Alessandra Lotti (39) pose for a portrait in front of the courthouse of Pescara, Italy, on September 17th 2019.<br />
<br />
Alessandro Biancardi closed down his website last year amid mountain legal costs and demands that he remove old articles by individuals citing the Right To Be Forgotten law.<br />
<br />
The closure of  the Italian news webbsite "Prima Da Noi", as a result of the European privacy law Right To Be Forgotten provides a cautionary about challenges of internet regulation.
    CIPG_20190917_NYT-RightToBeForgotten...jpg
  • PESCARA, ITALY - 17 SEPTEMBER 2019: (L-R) Alessandro Biancardi (47), former editor of "Prima di Noi", and his wife Alessandra Lotti (39) pose for a portrait in front of the courthouse of Pescara, Italy, on September 17th 2019.<br />
<br />
Alessandro Biancardi closed down his website last year amid mountain legal costs and demands that he remove old articles by individuals citing the Right To Be Forgotten law.<br />
<br />
The closure of  the Italian news webbsite "Prima Da Noi", as a result of the European privacy law Right To Be Forgotten provides a cautionary about challenges of internet regulation.
    CIPG_20190917_NYT-RightToBeForgotten...jpg
  • CASARANO, ITALY - 23 JULY 2018: Lawyer Eugenio Romano (65), who represents Keope srl, a former subcontractor of the the Italian shoe company Tody's, poses for a portrait in his studio in Casarano, Italy, on July 23rd 2018.<br />
<br />
In the southern Salento region of Italy, according to the lawyer Eugenio Romano, the shoe brand Tod’s  offered prices “at least 25% lower than those applied for the same operations for shoe-makers in the Marche region. Carla Ventura, owner of KEOPE srl and former subcontractor of Tod’s working as part of the brand’s productions chain, is represented by lawyer Eugenio Romano. Their legal proceeding  contain accusations “of abuse of dominant position, abuse of economic dependence in the supply contract, arbitrary termination of the commercial relationship, imposition of seriously discriminatory contractual conditions, and breach of the principles of fairness and good faith”. Romano’s conclusion is that “the basis for this disparity of treatment is the specific commercial choice made by Tod’s, which has been justified by senior executives on various occasions, asserting that in this geographical area, producer companies enjoy the so-called ‘Salento flexibility.’
    CIPG_20180723_NYT-MadeInItaly__M3_02...jpg
  • CASARANO, ITALY - 23 JULY 2018: (L-R) Lawyer Eugenio Romano (65), who represents Keope srl, and Maria Rosaria Scorrano (36), a former employee of Keope srl - a subcontractor of the the Italian shoe company Tody's -  discuss the trial against Tod's in Mr. Romano's studio in Casarano, Italy, on July 23rd 2018.<br />
<br />
In the southern Salento region of Italy, according to the lawyer Eugenio Romano, the shoe brand Tod’s  offered prices “at least 25% lower than those applied for the same operations for shoe-makers in the Marche region. Carla Ventura, owner of KEOPE srl and former subcontractor of Tod’s working as part of the brand’s productions chain, is represented by lawyer Eugenio Romano. Their legal proceeding  contain accusations “of abuse of dominant position, abuse of economic dependence in the supply contract, arbitrary termination of the commercial relationship, imposition of seriously discriminatory contractual conditions, and breach of the principles of fairness and good faith”. Romano’s conclusion is that “the basis for this disparity of treatment is the specific commercial choice made by Tod’s, which has been justified by senior executives on various occasions, asserting that in this geographical area, producer companies enjoy the so-called ‘Salento flexibility.’
    CIPG_20180723_NYT-MadeInItaly__M3_01...jpg
  • CASARANO, ITALY - 23 JULY 2018: Lawyer Eugenio Romano (65), who represents Keope srl, a former subcontractor of the the Italian shoe company Tody's, poses for a portrait in his studio in Casarano, Italy, on July 23rd 2018.<br />
<br />
In the southern Salento region of Italy, according to the lawyer Eugenio Romano, the shoe brand Tod’s  offered prices “at least 25% lower than those applied for the same operations for shoe-makers in the Marche region. Carla Ventura, owner of KEOPE srl and former subcontractor of Tod’s working as part of the brand’s productions chain, is represented by lawyer Eugenio Romano. Their legal proceeding  contain accusations “of abuse of dominant position, abuse of economic dependence in the supply contract, arbitrary termination of the commercial relationship, imposition of seriously discriminatory contractual conditions, and breach of the principles of fairness and good faith”. Romano’s conclusion is that “the basis for this disparity of treatment is the specific commercial choice made by Tod’s, which has been justified by senior executives on various occasions, asserting that in this geographical area, producer companies enjoy the so-called ‘Salento flexibility.’
    CIPG_20180723_NYT-MadeInItaly__M3_02...jpg
  • CASARANO, ITALY - 23 JULY 2018: Lawyer Eugenio Romano (65), who represents Keope srl, a former subcontractor of the the Italian shoe company Tody's, poses for a portrait in his studio in Casarano, Italy, on July 23rd 2018.<br />
<br />
In the southern Salento region of Italy, according to the lawyer Eugenio Romano, the shoe brand Tod’s  offered prices “at least 25% lower than those applied for the same operations for shoe-makers in the Marche region. Carla Ventura, owner of KEOPE srl and former subcontractor of Tod’s working as part of the brand’s productions chain, is represented by lawyer Eugenio Romano. Their legal proceeding  contain accusations “of abuse of dominant position, abuse of economic dependence in the supply contract, arbitrary termination of the commercial relationship, imposition of seriously discriminatory contractual conditions, and breach of the principles of fairness and good faith”. Romano’s conclusion is that “the basis for this disparity of treatment is the specific commercial choice made by Tod’s, which has been justified by senior executives on various occasions, asserting that in this geographical area, producer companies enjoy the so-called ‘Salento flexibility.’
    CIPG_20180723_NYT-MadeInItaly__M3_02...jpg
  • CASARANO, ITALY - 23 JULY 2018: Lawyer Eugenio Romano (65), who represents Keope srl, a former subcontractor of the the Italian shoe company Tody's, poses for a portrait in his studio in Casarano, Italy, on July 23rd 2018.<br />
<br />
In the southern Salento region of Italy, according to the lawyer Eugenio Romano, the shoe brand Tod’s  offered prices “at least 25% lower than those applied for the same operations for shoe-makers in the Marche region. Carla Ventura, owner of KEOPE srl and former subcontractor of Tod’s working as part of the brand’s productions chain, is represented by lawyer Eugenio Romano. Their legal proceeding  contain accusations “of abuse of dominant position, abuse of economic dependence in the supply contract, arbitrary termination of the commercial relationship, imposition of seriously discriminatory contractual conditions, and breach of the principles of fairness and good faith”. Romano’s conclusion is that “the basis for this disparity of treatment is the specific commercial choice made by Tod’s, which has been justified by senior executives on various occasions, asserting that in this geographical area, producer companies enjoy the so-called ‘Salento flexibility.’
    CIPG_20180723_NYT-MadeInItaly__M3_02...jpg
  • CASARANO, ITALY - 23 JULY 2018: Lawyer Eugenio Romano (65), who represents Keope srl, a former subcontractor of the the Italian shoe company Tody's, poses for a portrait in his studio in Casarano, Italy, on July 23rd 2018.<br />
<br />
In the southern Salento region of Italy, according to the lawyer Eugenio Romano, the shoe brand Tod’s  offered prices “at least 25% lower than those applied for the same operations for shoe-makers in the Marche region. Carla Ventura, owner of KEOPE srl and former subcontractor of Tod’s working as part of the brand’s productions chain, is represented by lawyer Eugenio Romano. Their legal proceeding  contain accusations “of abuse of dominant position, abuse of economic dependence in the supply contract, arbitrary termination of the commercial relationship, imposition of seriously discriminatory contractual conditions, and breach of the principles of fairness and good faith”. Romano’s conclusion is that “the basis for this disparity of treatment is the specific commercial choice made by Tod’s, which has been justified by senior executives on various occasions, asserting that in this geographical area, producer companies enjoy the so-called ‘Salento flexibility.’
    CIPG_20180723_NYT-MadeInItaly__M3_02...jpg
  • CASARANO, ITALY - 23 JULY 2018: Lawyer Eugenio Romano (65), who represents Keope srl, a former subcontractor of the the Italian shoe company Tody's, poses for a portrait in his studio in Casarano, Italy, on July 23rd 2018.<br />
<br />
In the southern Salento region of Italy, according to the lawyer Eugenio Romano, the shoe brand Tod’s  offered prices “at least 25% lower than those applied for the same operations for shoe-makers in the Marche region. Carla Ventura, owner of KEOPE srl and former subcontractor of Tod’s working as part of the brand’s productions chain, is represented by lawyer Eugenio Romano. Their legal proceeding  contain accusations “of abuse of dominant position, abuse of economic dependence in the supply contract, arbitrary termination of the commercial relationship, imposition of seriously discriminatory contractual conditions, and breach of the principles of fairness and good faith”. Romano’s conclusion is that “the basis for this disparity of treatment is the specific commercial choice made by Tod’s, which has been justified by senior executives on various occasions, asserting that in this geographical area, producer companies enjoy the so-called ‘Salento flexibility.’
    CIPG_20180723_NYT-MadeInItaly__M3_02...jpg
  • CASARANO, ITALY - 23 JULY 2018: (R-L) Lawyer Eugenio Romano (65), who represents Keope srl, and Maria Rosaria Scorrano (36), a former employee of Keope srl - a subcontractor of the the Italian shoe company Tody's -  discuss the trial against Tod's in Mr. Romano's studio in Casarano, Italy, on July 23rd 2018.<br />
<br />
In the southern Salento region of Italy, according to the lawyer Eugenio Romano, the shoe brand Tod’s  offered prices “at least 25% lower than those applied for the same operations for shoe-makers in the Marche region. Carla Ventura, owner of KEOPE srl and former subcontractor of Tod’s working as part of the brand’s productions chain, is represented by lawyer Eugenio Romano. Their legal proceeding  contain accusations “of abuse of dominant position, abuse of economic dependence in the supply contract, arbitrary termination of the commercial relationship, imposition of seriously discriminatory contractual conditions, and breach of the principles of fairness and good faith”. Romano’s conclusion is that “the basis for this disparity of treatment is the specific commercial choice made by Tod’s, which has been justified by senior executives on various occasions, asserting that in this geographical area, producer companies enjoy the so-called ‘Salento flexibility.’
    CIPG_20180723_NYT-MadeInItaly__M3_01...jpg
  • CASARANO, ITALY - 23 JULY 2018: Lawyer Eugenio Romano (65), who represents Keope srl, a former subcontractor of the the Italian shoe company Tody's, poses for a portrait in his studio in Casarano, Italy, on July 23rd 2018.<br />
<br />
In the southern Salento region of Italy, according to the lawyer Eugenio Romano, the shoe brand Tod’s  offered prices “at least 25% lower than those applied for the same operations for shoe-makers in the Marche region. Carla Ventura, owner of KEOPE srl and former subcontractor of Tod’s working as part of the brand’s productions chain, is represented by lawyer Eugenio Romano. Their legal proceeding  contain accusations “of abuse of dominant position, abuse of economic dependence in the supply contract, arbitrary termination of the commercial relationship, imposition of seriously discriminatory contractual conditions, and breach of the principles of fairness and good faith”. Romano’s conclusion is that “the basis for this disparity of treatment is the specific commercial choice made by Tod’s, which has been justified by senior executives on various occasions, asserting that in this geographical area, producer companies enjoy the so-called ‘Salento flexibility.’
    CIPG_20180723_NYT-MadeInItaly__M3_02...jpg
  • CASARANO, ITALY - 23 JULY 2018: Lawyer Eugenio Romano (65), who represents Keope srl, a former subcontractor of the the Italian shoe company Tody's, poses for a portrait in his studio in Casarano, Italy, on July 23rd 2018.<br />
<br />
In the southern Salento region of Italy, according to the lawyer Eugenio Romano, the shoe brand Tod’s  offered prices “at least 25% lower than those applied for the same operations for shoe-makers in the Marche region. Carla Ventura, owner of KEOPE srl and former subcontractor of Tod’s working as part of the brand’s productions chain, is represented by lawyer Eugenio Romano. Their legal proceeding  contain accusations “of abuse of dominant position, abuse of economic dependence in the supply contract, arbitrary termination of the commercial relationship, imposition of seriously discriminatory contractual conditions, and breach of the principles of fairness and good faith”. Romano’s conclusion is that “the basis for this disparity of treatment is the specific commercial choice made by Tod’s, which has been justified by senior executives on various occasions, asserting that in this geographical area, producer companies enjoy the so-called ‘Salento flexibility.’
    CIPG_20180723_NYT-MadeInItaly__M3_01...jpg
  • CASARANO, ITALY - 23 JULY 2018: (R-L) Lawyer Eugenio Romano (65), who represents Keope srl, and Maria Rosaria Scorrano (36), a former employee of Keope srl - a subcontractor of the the Italian shoe company Tody's -  discuss the trial against Tod's in Mr. Romano's studio in Casarano, Italy, on July 23rd 2018.<br />
<br />
In the southern Salento region of Italy, according to the lawyer Eugenio Romano, the shoe brand Tod’s  offered prices “at least 25% lower than those applied for the same operations for shoe-makers in the Marche region. Carla Ventura, owner of KEOPE srl and former subcontractor of Tod’s working as part of the brand’s productions chain, is represented by lawyer Eugenio Romano. Their legal proceeding  contain accusations “of abuse of dominant position, abuse of economic dependence in the supply contract, arbitrary termination of the commercial relationship, imposition of seriously discriminatory contractual conditions, and breach of the principles of fairness and good faith”. Romano’s conclusion is that “the basis for this disparity of treatment is the specific commercial choice made by Tod’s, which has been justified by senior executives on various occasions, asserting that in this geographical area, producer companies enjoy the so-called ‘Salento flexibility.’
    CIPG_20180723_NYT-MadeInItaly__M3_01...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 20 FEBRUARY 2020: A kitchen helper is seen here at work at the Ristorantino dell'Avvocato (The Lawyer's Resturant) in Naples, Italy, on February 20th 2020.<br />
<br />
After 20 years spent working as a lawyer, shuttling between courts and meetings with defendants, and puzzling over lawsuits and problems to unravel, Raffaele Cardillo decided to give up his law career and transform his passion – cooking – into a real job. Spending his evenings at the stove was a favorite pastime, the way he relaxed after a long day in court.<br />
<br />
In 2000, Raffaele opened a restaurant named Il Castagno in Camaldoli, a suburb of Naples; it quickly became a destination for lovers of Neapolitan gastronomy. He ran it together with his wife, Alda, and his son, Gabriele.<br />
<br />
Then in 2011, life offered him a new opportunity: to open a restaurant in Naples’ Santa Lucia district, a maritime area whose beauty has inspired numerous artists, poets and painters. And so Il Ristorantino dell’Avvocato, an elegant and intimate spot, was born.
    SMAS_20200220_CULBACK-Ristorantino-A...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 20 FEBRUARY 2020: Raffaelle Cardillo (70, back, center) - founder and chef of the Ristorantino dell'Avvocato (The Lawyer's Resturant) - is seen here at work in his kitchen in Naples, Italy, on February 20th 2020.<br />
<br />
After 20 years spent working as a lawyer, shuttling between courts and meetings with defendants, and puzzling over lawsuits and problems to unravel, Raffaele Cardillo decided to give up his law career and transform his passion – cooking – into a real job. Spending his evenings at the stove was a favorite pastime, the way he relaxed after a long day in court.<br />
<br />
In 2000, Raffaele opened a restaurant named Il Castagno in Camaldoli, a suburb of Naples; it quickly became a destination for lovers of Neapolitan gastronomy. He ran it together with his wife, Alda, and his son, Gabriele.<br />
<br />
Then in 2011, life offered him a new opportunity: to open a restaurant in Naples’ Santa Lucia district, a maritime area whose beauty has inspired numerous artists, poets and painters. And so Il Ristorantino dell’Avvocato, an elegant and intimate spot, was born.
    SMAS_20200220_CULBACK-Ristorantino-A...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 20 FEBRUARY 2020: A waiters is seen here at work at the Ristorantino dell'Avvocato (The Lawyer's Resturant) in Naples, Italy, on February 20th 2020.<br />
<br />
After 20 years spent working as a lawyer, shuttling between courts and meetings with defendants, and puzzling over lawsuits and problems to unravel, Raffaele Cardillo decided to give up his law career and transform his passion – cooking – into a real job. Spending his evenings at the stove was a favorite pastime, the way he relaxed after a long day in court.<br />
<br />
In 2000, Raffaele opened a restaurant named Il Castagno in Camaldoli, a suburb of Naples; it quickly became a destination for lovers of Neapolitan gastronomy. He ran it together with his wife, Alda, and his son, Gabriele.<br />
<br />
Then in 2011, life offered him a new opportunity: to open a restaurant in Naples’ Santa Lucia district, a maritime area whose beauty has inspired numerous artists, poets and painters. And so Il Ristorantino dell’Avvocato, an elegant and intimate spot, was born.
    SMAS_20200220_CULBACK-Ristorantino-A...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 20 FEBRUARY 2020: Raffaelle Cardillo (70, back, center) - founder and chef of the Ristorantino dell'Avvocato (The Lawyer's Resturant) - is seen here at work in his kitchen in Naples, Italy, on February 20th 2020.<br />
<br />
After 20 years spent working as a lawyer, shuttling between courts and meetings with defendants, and puzzling over lawsuits and problems to unravel, Raffaele Cardillo decided to give up his law career and transform his passion – cooking – into a real job. Spending his evenings at the stove was a favorite pastime, the way he relaxed after a long day in court.<br />
<br />
In 2000, Raffaele opened a restaurant named Il Castagno in Camaldoli, a suburb of Naples; it quickly became a destination for lovers of Neapolitan gastronomy. He ran it together with his wife, Alda, and his son, Gabriele.<br />
<br />
Then in 2011, life offered him a new opportunity: to open a restaurant in Naples’ Santa Lucia district, a maritime area whose beauty has inspired numerous artists, poets and painters. And so Il Ristorantino dell’Avvocato, an elegant and intimate spot, was born.
    SMAS_20200220_CULBACK-Ristorantino-A...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 20 FEBRUARY 2020: Raffaelle Cardillo (70, right) - founder and chef of the Ristorantino dell'Avvocato (The Lawyer's Resturant) - chats with a customer in his restaurant in Naples, Italy, on February 20th 2020.<br />
<br />
After 20 years spent working as a lawyer, shuttling between courts and meetings with defendants, and puzzling over lawsuits and problems to unravel, Raffaele Cardillo decided to give up his law career and transform his passion – cooking – into a real job. Spending his evenings at the stove was a favorite pastime, the way he relaxed after a long day in court.<br />
<br />
In 2000, Raffaele opened a restaurant named Il Castagno in Camaldoli, a suburb of Naples; it quickly became a destination for lovers of Neapolitan gastronomy. He ran it together with his wife, Alda, and his son, Gabriele.<br />
<br />
Then in 2011, life offered him a new opportunity: to open a restaurant in Naples’ Santa Lucia district, a maritime area whose beauty has inspired numerous artists, poets and painters. And so Il Ristorantino dell’Avvocato, an elegant and intimate spot, was born.
    SMAS_20200220_CULBACK-Ristorantino-A...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 20 FEBRUARY 2020: Fried shrimps and carots are seen here at the Ristorantino dell'Avvocato (The Lawyer's Resturant) in Naples, Italy, on February 20th 2020.<br />
<br />
After 20 years spent working as a lawyer, shuttling between courts and meetings with defendants, and puzzling over lawsuits and problems to unravel, Raffaele Cardillo decided to give up his law career and transform his passion – cooking – into a real job. Spending his evenings at the stove was a favorite pastime, the way he relaxed after a long day in court.<br />
<br />
In 2000, Raffaele opened a restaurant named Il Castagno in Camaldoli, a suburb of Naples; it quickly became a destination for lovers of Neapolitan gastronomy. He ran it together with his wife, Alda, and his son, Gabriele.<br />
<br />
Then in 2011, life offered him a new opportunity: to open a restaurant in Naples’ Santa Lucia district, a maritime area whose beauty has inspired numerous artists, poets and painters. And so Il Ristorantino dell’Avvocato, an elegant and intimate spot, was born.
    CIPG_20200220_CULBACK-Ristorantino-A...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 20 FEBRUARY 2020: Raffaelle Cardillo (70, back, center) - founder and chef of the Ristorantino dell'Avvocato (The Lawyer's Resturant) - is seen here at work in his kitchen in Naples, Italy, on February 20th 2020.<br />
<br />
After 20 years spent working as a lawyer, shuttling between courts and meetings with defendants, and puzzling over lawsuits and problems to unravel, Raffaele Cardillo decided to give up his law career and transform his passion – cooking – into a real job. Spending his evenings at the stove was a favorite pastime, the way he relaxed after a long day in court.<br />
<br />
In 2000, Raffaele opened a restaurant named Il Castagno in Camaldoli, a suburb of Naples; it quickly became a destination for lovers of Neapolitan gastronomy. He ran it together with his wife, Alda, and his son, Gabriele.<br />
<br />
Then in 2011, life offered him a new opportunity: to open a restaurant in Naples’ Santa Lucia district, a maritime area whose beauty has inspired numerous artists, poets and painters. And so Il Ristorantino dell’Avvocato, an elegant and intimate spot, was born.
    CIPG_20200220_CULBACK-Ristorantino-A...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 20 FEBRUARY 2020: Raffaelle Cardillo (70, back, center) - founder and chef of the Ristorantino dell'Avvocato (The Lawyer's Resturant) - is seen here at work in his kitchen in Naples, Italy, on February 20th 2020.<br />
<br />
After 20 years spent working as a lawyer, shuttling between courts and meetings with defendants, and puzzling over lawsuits and problems to unravel, Raffaele Cardillo decided to give up his law career and transform his passion – cooking – into a real job. Spending his evenings at the stove was a favorite pastime, the way he relaxed after a long day in court.<br />
<br />
In 2000, Raffaele opened a restaurant named Il Castagno in Camaldoli, a suburb of Naples; it quickly became a destination for lovers of Neapolitan gastronomy. He ran it together with his wife, Alda, and his son, Gabriele.<br />
<br />
Then in 2011, life offered him a new opportunity: to open a restaurant in Naples’ Santa Lucia district, a maritime area whose beauty has inspired numerous artists, poets and painters. And so Il Ristorantino dell’Avvocato, an elegant and intimate spot, was born.
    CIPG_20200220_CULBACK-Ristorantino-A...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 20 FEBRUARY 2020: Raffaelle Cardillo (70, back, center) - founder and chef of the Ristorantino dell'Avvocato (The Lawyer's Resturant) - is seen here at work in his kitchen in Naples, Italy, on February 20th 2020.<br />
<br />
After 20 years spent working as a lawyer, shuttling between courts and meetings with defendants, and puzzling over lawsuits and problems to unravel, Raffaele Cardillo decided to give up his law career and transform his passion – cooking – into a real job. Spending his evenings at the stove was a favorite pastime, the way he relaxed after a long day in court.<br />
<br />
In 2000, Raffaele opened a restaurant named Il Castagno in Camaldoli, a suburb of Naples; it quickly became a destination for lovers of Neapolitan gastronomy. He ran it together with his wife, Alda, and his son, Gabriele.<br />
<br />
Then in 2011, life offered him a new opportunity: to open a restaurant in Naples’ Santa Lucia district, a maritime area whose beauty has inspired numerous artists, poets and painters. And so Il Ristorantino dell’Avvocato, an elegant and intimate spot, was born.
    CIPG_20200220_CULBACK-Ristorantino-A...jpg
  • CASARANO, ITALY - 23 JULY 2018: Maria Rosaria Scorrano (36), a former employee of Keope srl - a subcontractor of the the Italian shoe company Tody's -  poses for a portrait in Casarano, Italy, on July 23rd 2018.<br />
<br />
In the southern Salento region of Italy, according to the lawyer Eugenio Romano, the shoe brand Tod’s  offered prices “at least 25% lower than those applied for the same operations for shoe-makers in the Marche region. Carla Ventura, owner of KEOPE srl and former subcontractor of Tod’s working as part of the brand’s productions chain, is represented by lawyer Eugenio Romano. Their legal proceeding  contain accusations “of abuse of dominant position, abuse of economic dependence in the supply contract, arbitrary termination of the commercial relationship, imposition of seriously discriminatory contractual conditions, and breach of the principles of fairness and good faith”. Romano’s conclusion is that “the basis for this disparity of treatment is the specific commercial choice made by Tod’s, which has been justified by senior executives on various occasions, asserting that in this geographical area, producer companies enjoy the so-called ‘Salento flexibility.’
    CIPG_20180723_NYT-MadeInItaly__M3_99...jpg
  • CASARANO, ITALY - 23 JULY 2018: Maria Rosaria Scorrano (36), a former employee of Keope srl - a subcontractor of the the Italian shoe company Tody's -  poses for a portrait in Casarano, Italy, on July 23rd 2018.<br />
<br />
In the southern Salento region of Italy, according to the lawyer Eugenio Romano, the shoe brand Tod’s  offered prices “at least 25% lower than those applied for the same operations for shoe-makers in the Marche region. Carla Ventura, owner of KEOPE srl and former subcontractor of Tod’s working as part of the brand’s productions chain, is represented by lawyer Eugenio Romano. Their legal proceeding  contain accusations “of abuse of dominant position, abuse of economic dependence in the supply contract, arbitrary termination of the commercial relationship, imposition of seriously discriminatory contractual conditions, and breach of the principles of fairness and good faith”. Romano’s conclusion is that “the basis for this disparity of treatment is the specific commercial choice made by Tod’s, which has been justified by senior executives on various occasions, asserting that in this geographical area, producer companies enjoy the so-called ‘Salento flexibility.’
    CIPG_20180723_NYT-MadeInItaly__M3_01...jpg
  • CASARANO, ITALY - 23 JULY 2018: Maria Rosaria Scorrano (36), a former employee of Keope srl - a subcontractor of the the Italian shoe company Tody's -  poses for a portrait in Casarano, Italy, on July 23rd 2018.<br />
<br />
In the southern Salento region of Italy, according to the lawyer Eugenio Romano, the shoe brand Tod’s  offered prices “at least 25% lower than those applied for the same operations for shoe-makers in the Marche region. Carla Ventura, owner of KEOPE srl and former subcontractor of Tod’s working as part of the brand’s productions chain, is represented by lawyer Eugenio Romano. Their legal proceeding  contain accusations “of abuse of dominant position, abuse of economic dependence in the supply contract, arbitrary termination of the commercial relationship, imposition of seriously discriminatory contractual conditions, and breach of the principles of fairness and good faith”. Romano’s conclusion is that “the basis for this disparity of treatment is the specific commercial choice made by Tod’s, which has been justified by senior executives on various occasions, asserting that in this geographical area, producer companies enjoy the so-called ‘Salento flexibility.’
    CIPG_20180723_NYT-MadeInItaly__M3_00...jpg
  • CASARANO, ITALY - 23 JULY 2018: Maria Rosaria Scorrano (36), a former employee of Keope srl - a subcontractor of the the Italian shoe company Tody's -  poses for a portrait in Casarano, Italy, on July 23rd 2018.<br />
<br />
In the southern Salento region of Italy, according to the lawyer Eugenio Romano, the shoe brand Tod’s  offered prices “at least 25% lower than those applied for the same operations for shoe-makers in the Marche region. Carla Ventura, owner of KEOPE srl and former subcontractor of Tod’s working as part of the brand’s productions chain, is represented by lawyer Eugenio Romano. Their legal proceeding  contain accusations “of abuse of dominant position, abuse of economic dependence in the supply contract, arbitrary termination of the commercial relationship, imposition of seriously discriminatory contractual conditions, and breach of the principles of fairness and good faith”. Romano’s conclusion is that “the basis for this disparity of treatment is the specific commercial choice made by Tod’s, which has been justified by senior executives on various occasions, asserting that in this geographical area, producer companies enjoy the so-called ‘Salento flexibility.’
    CIPG_20180723_NYT-MadeInItaly__M3_00...jpg
  • CASARANO, ITALY - 23 JULY 2018: Maria Rosaria Scorrano (36), a former employee of Keope srl - a subcontractor of the the Italian shoe company Tody's -  poses for a portrait in Casarano, Italy, on July 23rd 2018.<br />
<br />
In the southern Salento region of Italy, according to the lawyer Eugenio Romano, the shoe brand Tod’s  offered prices “at least 25% lower than those applied for the same operations for shoe-makers in the Marche region. Carla Ventura, owner of KEOPE srl and former subcontractor of Tod’s working as part of the brand’s productions chain, is represented by lawyer Eugenio Romano. Their legal proceeding  contain accusations “of abuse of dominant position, abuse of economic dependence in the supply contract, arbitrary termination of the commercial relationship, imposition of seriously discriminatory contractual conditions, and breach of the principles of fairness and good faith”. Romano’s conclusion is that “the basis for this disparity of treatment is the specific commercial choice made by Tod’s, which has been justified by senior executives on various occasions, asserting that in this geographical area, producer companies enjoy the so-called ‘Salento flexibility.’
    CIPG_20180723_NYT-MadeInItaly__M3_00...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 20 FEBRUARY 2020: Customers have lunch here at the Ristorantino dell'Avvocato (The Lawyer's Resturant) in Naples, Italy, on February 20th 2020.<br />
<br />
After 20 years spent working as a lawyer, shuttling between courts and meetings with defendants, and puzzling over lawsuits and problems to unravel, Raffaele Cardillo decided to give up his law career and transform his passion – cooking – into a real job. Spending his evenings at the stove was a favorite pastime, the way he relaxed after a long day in court.<br />
<br />
In 2000, Raffaele opened a restaurant named Il Castagno in Camaldoli, a suburb of Naples; it quickly became a destination for lovers of Neapolitan gastronomy. He ran it together with his wife, Alda, and his son, Gabriele.<br />
<br />
Then in 2011, life offered him a new opportunity: to open a restaurant in Naples’ Santa Lucia district, a maritime area whose beauty has inspired numerous artists, poets and painters. And so Il Ristorantino dell’Avvocato, an elegant and intimate spot, was born.
    SMAS_20200220_CULBACK-Ristorantino-A...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 20 FEBRUARY 2020: Raffaelle Cardillo (70, back, center) - founder and chef of the Ristorantino dell'Avvocato (The Lawyer's Resturant) - is seen here at work in his kitchen in Naples, Italy, on February 20th 2020.<br />
<br />
After 20 years spent working as a lawyer, shuttling between courts and meetings with defendants, and puzzling over lawsuits and problems to unravel, Raffaele Cardillo decided to give up his law career and transform his passion – cooking – into a real job. Spending his evenings at the stove was a favorite pastime, the way he relaxed after a long day in court.<br />
<br />
In 2000, Raffaele opened a restaurant named Il Castagno in Camaldoli, a suburb of Naples; it quickly became a destination for lovers of Neapolitan gastronomy. He ran it together with his wife, Alda, and his son, Gabriele.<br />
<br />
Then in 2011, life offered him a new opportunity: to open a restaurant in Naples’ Santa Lucia district, a maritime area whose beauty has inspired numerous artists, poets and painters. And so Il Ristorantino dell’Avvocato, an elegant and intimate spot, was born.
    SMAS_20200220_CULBACK-Ristorantino-A...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 20 FEBRUARY 2020: Raffaelle Cardillo (70, back, center) - founder and chef of the Ristorantino dell'Avvocato (The Lawyer's Resturant) - chats with a customer in his restaurant in Naples, Italy, on February 20th 2020.<br />
<br />
After 20 years spent working as a lawyer, shuttling between courts and meetings with defendants, and puzzling over lawsuits and problems to unravel, Raffaele Cardillo decided to give up his law career and transform his passion – cooking – into a real job. Spending his evenings at the stove was a favorite pastime, the way he relaxed after a long day in court.<br />
<br />
In 2000, Raffaele opened a restaurant named Il Castagno in Camaldoli, a suburb of Naples; it quickly became a destination for lovers of Neapolitan gastronomy. He ran it together with his wife, Alda, and his son, Gabriele.<br />
<br />
Then in 2011, life offered him a new opportunity: to open a restaurant in Naples’ Santa Lucia district, a maritime area whose beauty has inspired numerous artists, poets and painters. And so Il Ristorantino dell’Avvocato, an elegant and intimate spot, was born.
    SMAS_20200220_CULBACK-Ristorantino-A...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 20 FEBRUARY 2020: Shrimps, octupus and fennel are seen here at the Ristorantino dell'Avvocato (The Lawyer's Resturant) in Naples, Italy, on February 20th 2020.<br />
<br />
After 20 years spent working as a lawyer, shuttling between courts and meetings with defendants, and puzzling over lawsuits and problems to unravel, Raffaele Cardillo decided to give up his law career and transform his passion – cooking – into a real job. Spending his evenings at the stove was a favorite pastime, the way he relaxed after a long day in court.<br />
<br />
In 2000, Raffaele opened a restaurant named Il Castagno in Camaldoli, a suburb of Naples; it quickly became a destination for lovers of Neapolitan gastronomy. He ran it together with his wife, Alda, and his son, Gabriele.<br />
<br />
Then in 2011, life offered him a new opportunity: to open a restaurant in Naples’ Santa Lucia district, a maritime area whose beauty has inspired numerous artists, poets and painters. And so Il Ristorantino dell’Avvocato, an elegant and intimate spot, was born.
    CIPG_20200220_CULBACK-Ristorantino-A...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 20 FEBRUARY 2020: A waiters is seen here at work at the Ristorantino dell'Avvocato (The Lawyer's Resturant) in Naples, Italy, on February 20th 2020.<br />
<br />
After 20 years spent working as a lawyer, shuttling between courts and meetings with defendants, and puzzling over lawsuits and problems to unravel, Raffaele Cardillo decided to give up his law career and transform his passion – cooking – into a real job. Spending his evenings at the stove was a favorite pastime, the way he relaxed after a long day in court.<br />
<br />
In 2000, Raffaele opened a restaurant named Il Castagno in Camaldoli, a suburb of Naples; it quickly became a destination for lovers of Neapolitan gastronomy. He ran it together with his wife, Alda, and his son, Gabriele.<br />
<br />
Then in 2011, life offered him a new opportunity: to open a restaurant in Naples’ Santa Lucia district, a maritime area whose beauty has inspired numerous artists, poets and painters. And so Il Ristorantino dell’Avvocato, an elegant and intimate spot, was born.
    CIPG_20200220_CULBACK-Ristorantino-A...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 20 FEBRUARY 2020: Raffaelle Cardillo (70, back, center) - founder and chef of the Ristorantino dell'Avvocato (The Lawyer's Resturant) - is seen here at work in his kitchen in Naples, Italy, on February 20th 2020.<br />
<br />
After 20 years spent working as a lawyer, shuttling between courts and meetings with defendants, and puzzling over lawsuits and problems to unravel, Raffaele Cardillo decided to give up his law career and transform his passion – cooking – into a real job. Spending his evenings at the stove was a favorite pastime, the way he relaxed after a long day in court.<br />
<br />
In 2000, Raffaele opened a restaurant named Il Castagno in Camaldoli, a suburb of Naples; it quickly became a destination for lovers of Neapolitan gastronomy. He ran it together with his wife, Alda, and his son, Gabriele.<br />
<br />
Then in 2011, life offered him a new opportunity: to open a restaurant in Naples’ Santa Lucia district, a maritime area whose beauty has inspired numerous artists, poets and painters. And so Il Ristorantino dell’Avvocato, an elegant and intimate spot, was born.
    CIPG_20200220_CULBACK-Ristorantino-A...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 20 FEBRUARY 2020: Customers have lunch here at the Ristorantino dell'Avvocato (The Lawyer's Resturant) in Naples, Italy, on February 20th 2020.<br />
<br />
After 20 years spent working as a lawyer, shuttling between courts and meetings with defendants, and puzzling over lawsuits and problems to unravel, Raffaele Cardillo decided to give up his law career and transform his passion – cooking – into a real job. Spending his evenings at the stove was a favorite pastime, the way he relaxed after a long day in court.<br />
<br />
In 2000, Raffaele opened a restaurant named Il Castagno in Camaldoli, a suburb of Naples; it quickly became a destination for lovers of Neapolitan gastronomy. He ran it together with his wife, Alda, and his son, Gabriele.<br />
<br />
Then in 2011, life offered him a new opportunity: to open a restaurant in Naples’ Santa Lucia district, a maritime area whose beauty has inspired numerous artists, poets and painters. And so Il Ristorantino dell’Avvocato, an elegant and intimate spot, was born.
    CIPG_20200220_CULBACK-Ristorantino-A...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 20 FEBRUARY 2020: Customers have lunch here at the Ristorantino dell'Avvocato (The Lawyer's Resturant) in Naples, Italy, on February 20th 2020.<br />
<br />
After 20 years spent working as a lawyer, shuttling between courts and meetings with defendants, and puzzling over lawsuits and problems to unravel, Raffaele Cardillo decided to give up his law career and transform his passion – cooking – into a real job. Spending his evenings at the stove was a favorite pastime, the way he relaxed after a long day in court.<br />
<br />
In 2000, Raffaele opened a restaurant named Il Castagno in Camaldoli, a suburb of Naples; it quickly became a destination for lovers of Neapolitan gastronomy. He ran it together with his wife, Alda, and his son, Gabriele.<br />
<br />
Then in 2011, life offered him a new opportunity: to open a restaurant in Naples’ Santa Lucia district, a maritime area whose beauty has inspired numerous artists, poets and painters. And so Il Ristorantino dell’Avvocato, an elegant and intimate spot, was born.
    CIPG_20200220_CULBACK-Ristorantino-A...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 20 FEBRUARY 2020: Customers have lunch here at the Ristorantino dell'Avvocato (The Lawyer's Resturant) in Naples, Italy, on February 20th 2020.<br />
<br />
After 20 years spent working as a lawyer, shuttling between courts and meetings with defendants, and puzzling over lawsuits and problems to unravel, Raffaele Cardillo decided to give up his law career and transform his passion – cooking – into a real job. Spending his evenings at the stove was a favorite pastime, the way he relaxed after a long day in court.<br />
<br />
In 2000, Raffaele opened a restaurant named Il Castagno in Camaldoli, a suburb of Naples; it quickly became a destination for lovers of Neapolitan gastronomy. He ran it together with his wife, Alda, and his son, Gabriele.<br />
<br />
Then in 2011, life offered him a new opportunity: to open a restaurant in Naples’ Santa Lucia district, a maritime area whose beauty has inspired numerous artists, poets and painters. And so Il Ristorantino dell’Avvocato, an elegant and intimate spot, was born.
    CIPG_20200220_CULBACK-Ristorantino-A...jpg
  • CASARANO, ITALY - 23 JULY 2018: Maria Rosaria Scorrano (36), a former employee of Keope srl - a subcontractor of the the Italian shoe company Tody's -  poses for a portrait in Casarano, Italy, on July 23rd 2018.<br />
<br />
In the southern Salento region of Italy, according to the lawyer Eugenio Romano, the shoe brand Tod’s  offered prices “at least 25% lower than those applied for the same operations for shoe-makers in the Marche region. Carla Ventura, owner of KEOPE srl and former subcontractor of Tod’s working as part of the brand’s productions chain, is represented by lawyer Eugenio Romano. Their legal proceeding  contain accusations “of abuse of dominant position, abuse of economic dependence in the supply contract, arbitrary termination of the commercial relationship, imposition of seriously discriminatory contractual conditions, and breach of the principles of fairness and good faith”. Romano’s conclusion is that “the basis for this disparity of treatment is the specific commercial choice made by Tod’s, which has been justified by senior executives on various occasions, asserting that in this geographical area, producer companies enjoy the so-called ‘Salento flexibility.’
    CIPG_20180723_NYT-MadeInItaly__M3_01...jpg
  • CASARANO, ITALY - 23 JULY 2018: Maria Rosaria Scorrano (36), a former employee of Keope srl - a subcontractor of the the Italian shoe company Tody's -  poses for a portrait in Casarano, Italy, on July 23rd 2018.<br />
<br />
In the southern Salento region of Italy, according to the lawyer Eugenio Romano, the shoe brand Tod’s  offered prices “at least 25% lower than those applied for the same operations for shoe-makers in the Marche region. Carla Ventura, owner of KEOPE srl and former subcontractor of Tod’s working as part of the brand’s productions chain, is represented by lawyer Eugenio Romano. Their legal proceeding  contain accusations “of abuse of dominant position, abuse of economic dependence in the supply contract, arbitrary termination of the commercial relationship, imposition of seriously discriminatory contractual conditions, and breach of the principles of fairness and good faith”. Romano’s conclusion is that “the basis for this disparity of treatment is the specific commercial choice made by Tod’s, which has been justified by senior executives on various occasions, asserting that in this geographical area, producer companies enjoy the so-called ‘Salento flexibility.’
    CIPG_20180723_NYT-MadeInItaly__M3_01...jpg
  • CASARANO, ITALY - 23 JULY 2018: Maria Rosaria Scorrano (36), a former employee of Keope srl - a subcontractor of the the Italian shoe company Tody's -  poses for a portrait in Casarano, Italy, on July 23rd 2018.<br />
<br />
In the southern Salento region of Italy, according to the lawyer Eugenio Romano, the shoe brand Tod’s  offered prices “at least 25% lower than those applied for the same operations for shoe-makers in the Marche region. Carla Ventura, owner of KEOPE srl and former subcontractor of Tod’s working as part of the brand’s productions chain, is represented by lawyer Eugenio Romano. Their legal proceeding  contain accusations “of abuse of dominant position, abuse of economic dependence in the supply contract, arbitrary termination of the commercial relationship, imposition of seriously discriminatory contractual conditions, and breach of the principles of fairness and good faith”. Romano’s conclusion is that “the basis for this disparity of treatment is the specific commercial choice made by Tod’s, which has been justified by senior executives on various occasions, asserting that in this geographical area, producer companies enjoy the so-called ‘Salento flexibility.’
    CIPG_20180723_NYT-MadeInItaly__M3_00...jpg
  • CASARANO, ITALY - 23 JULY 2018: Maria Rosaria Scorrano (36), a former employee of Keope srl - a subcontractor of the the Italian shoe company Tody's -  poses for a portrait in Casarano, Italy, on July 23rd 2018.<br />
<br />
In the southern Salento region of Italy, according to the lawyer Eugenio Romano, the shoe brand Tod’s  offered prices “at least 25% lower than those applied for the same operations for shoe-makers in the Marche region. Carla Ventura, owner of KEOPE srl and former subcontractor of Tod’s working as part of the brand’s productions chain, is represented by lawyer Eugenio Romano. Their legal proceeding  contain accusations “of abuse of dominant position, abuse of economic dependence in the supply contract, arbitrary termination of the commercial relationship, imposition of seriously discriminatory contractual conditions, and breach of the principles of fairness and good faith”. Romano’s conclusion is that “the basis for this disparity of treatment is the specific commercial choice made by Tod’s, which has been justified by senior executives on various occasions, asserting that in this geographical area, producer companies enjoy the so-called ‘Salento flexibility.’
    CIPG_20180723_NYT-MadeInItaly__M3_00...jpg
  • CASARANO, ITALY - 23 JULY 2018: Maria Rosaria Scorrano (36), a former employee of Keope srl - a subcontractor of the the Italian shoe company Tody's -  poses for a portrait in Casarano, Italy, on July 23rd 2018.<br />
<br />
In the southern Salento region of Italy, according to the lawyer Eugenio Romano, the shoe brand Tod’s  offered prices “at least 25% lower than those applied for the same operations for shoe-makers in the Marche region. Carla Ventura, owner of KEOPE srl and former subcontractor of Tod’s working as part of the brand’s productions chain, is represented by lawyer Eugenio Romano. Their legal proceeding  contain accusations “of abuse of dominant position, abuse of economic dependence in the supply contract, arbitrary termination of the commercial relationship, imposition of seriously discriminatory contractual conditions, and breach of the principles of fairness and good faith”. Romano’s conclusion is that “the basis for this disparity of treatment is the specific commercial choice made by Tod’s, which has been justified by senior executives on various occasions, asserting that in this geographical area, producer companies enjoy the so-called ‘Salento flexibility.’
    CIPG_20180723_NYT-MadeInItaly__M3_00...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 20 FEBRUARY 2020: Customers have lunch here at the Ristorantino dell'Avvocato (The Lawyer's Resturant) in Naples, Italy, on February 20th 2020.<br />
<br />
After 20 years spent working as a lawyer, shuttling between courts and meetings with defendants, and puzzling over lawsuits and problems to unravel, Raffaele Cardillo decided to give up his law career and transform his passion – cooking – into a real job. Spending his evenings at the stove was a favorite pastime, the way he relaxed after a long day in court.<br />
<br />
In 2000, Raffaele opened a restaurant named Il Castagno in Camaldoli, a suburb of Naples; it quickly became a destination for lovers of Neapolitan gastronomy. He ran it together with his wife, Alda, and his son, Gabriele.<br />
<br />
Then in 2011, life offered him a new opportunity: to open a restaurant in Naples’ Santa Lucia district, a maritime area whose beauty has inspired numerous artists, poets and painters. And so Il Ristorantino dell’Avvocato, an elegant and intimate spot, was born.
    SMAS_20200220_CULBACK-Ristorantino-A...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 20 FEBRUARY 2020: A waiters is seen here at work at the Ristorantino dell'Avvocato (The Lawyer's Resturant) in Naples, Italy, on February 20th 2020.<br />
<br />
After 20 years spent working as a lawyer, shuttling between courts and meetings with defendants, and puzzling over lawsuits and problems to unravel, Raffaele Cardillo decided to give up his law career and transform his passion – cooking – into a real job. Spending his evenings at the stove was a favorite pastime, the way he relaxed after a long day in court.<br />
<br />
In 2000, Raffaele opened a restaurant named Il Castagno in Camaldoli, a suburb of Naples; it quickly became a destination for lovers of Neapolitan gastronomy. He ran it together with his wife, Alda, and his son, Gabriele.<br />
<br />
Then in 2011, life offered him a new opportunity: to open a restaurant in Naples’ Santa Lucia district, a maritime area whose beauty has inspired numerous artists, poets and painters. And so Il Ristorantino dell’Avvocato, an elegant and intimate spot, was born.
    SMAS_20200220_CULBACK-Ristorantino-A...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 20 FEBRUARY 2020: Raffaelle Cardillo (70, back, center) - founder and chef of the Ristorantino dell'Avvocato (The Lawyer's Resturant) - is seen here at work in his kitchen in Naples, Italy, on February 20th 2020.<br />
<br />
After 20 years spent working as a lawyer, shuttling between courts and meetings with defendants, and puzzling over lawsuits and problems to unravel, Raffaele Cardillo decided to give up his law career and transform his passion – cooking – into a real job. Spending his evenings at the stove was a favorite pastime, the way he relaxed after a long day in court.<br />
<br />
In 2000, Raffaele opened a restaurant named Il Castagno in Camaldoli, a suburb of Naples; it quickly became a destination for lovers of Neapolitan gastronomy. He ran it together with his wife, Alda, and his son, Gabriele.<br />
<br />
Then in 2011, life offered him a new opportunity: to open a restaurant in Naples’ Santa Lucia district, a maritime area whose beauty has inspired numerous artists, poets and painters. And so Il Ristorantino dell’Avvocato, an elegant and intimate spot, was born.
    CIPG_20200220_CULBACK-Ristorantino-A...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 20 FEBRUARY 2020: Large eell with zucchini are seen here at the Ristorantino dell'Avvocato (The Lawyer's Resturant) in Naples, Italy, on February 20th 2020.<br />
<br />
After 20 years spent working as a lawyer, shuttling between courts and meetings with defendants, and puzzling over lawsuits and problems to unravel, Raffaele Cardillo decided to give up his law career and transform his passion – cooking – into a real job. Spending his evenings at the stove was a favorite pastime, the way he relaxed after a long day in court.<br />
<br />
In 2000, Raffaele opened a restaurant named Il Castagno in Camaldoli, a suburb of Naples; it quickly became a destination for lovers of Neapolitan gastronomy. He ran it together with his wife, Alda, and his son, Gabriele.<br />
<br />
Then in 2011, life offered him a new opportunity: to open a restaurant in Naples’ Santa Lucia district, a maritime area whose beauty has inspired numerous artists, poets and painters. And so Il Ristorantino dell’Avvocato, an elegant and intimate spot, was born.
    CIPG_20200220_CULBACK-Ristorantino-A...jpg
  • SIRACUSA (SR) - 22 MARZO 2018: Glenda Raiti, avvocato di 37 anni, in posa per un ritratto al cocktail bar Cortile Verga a Siracusa il 22 marzo 2018. <br />
<br />
Siracusa è considerata tra le città più ospitali d'Italia.<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
SIRACUSA, ITALY - 22 MARCH 2018: Glenda Raiti, a 37 years old lawyer, poses for a portrait at the Cortile Verga cocktail bar in Siracusa, Italy, on March 22nd 2018.<br />
<br />
Siacusa is considered one of the most coziest Italian cities.
    CIPG_20180322_GIOIA_Siracusa_M3_0613.jpg
  • SIRACUSA (SR) - 22 MARZO 2018: Glenda Raiti, avvocato di 37 anni, in posa per un ritratto al cocktail bar Cortile Verga a Siracusa il 22 marzo 2018. <br />
<br />
Siracusa è considerata tra le città più ospitali d'Italia.<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
SIRACUSA, ITALY - 22 MARCH 2018: Glenda Raiti, a 37 years old lawyer, poses for a portrait at the Cortile Verga cocktail bar in Siracusa, Italy, on March 22nd 2018.<br />
<br />
Siacusa is considered one of the most coziest Italian cities.
    CIPG_20180322_GIOIA_Siracusa_M3_0441.jpg
  • SIRACUSA (SR) - 22 MARZO 2018: Glenda Raiti, avvocato di 37 anni, in posa per un ritratto al cocktail bar Cortile Verga a Siracusa il 22 marzo 2018. <br />
<br />
Siracusa è considerata tra le città più ospitali d'Italia.<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
SIRACUSA, ITALY - 22 MARCH 2018: Glenda Raiti, a 37 years old lawyer, poses for a portrait at the Cortile Verga cocktail bar in Siracusa, Italy, on March 22nd 2018.<br />
<br />
Siacusa is considered one of the most coziest Italian cities.
    CIPG_20180322_GIOIA_Siracusa_M3_0409.jpg
  • SIRACUSA (SR) - 22 MARZO 2018: Glenda Raiti, avvocato di 37 anni, in posa per un ritratto al cocktail bar Cortile Verga a Siracusa il 22 marzo 2018. <br />
<br />
Siracusa è considerata tra le città più ospitali d'Italia.<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
SIRACUSA, ITALY - 22 MARCH 2018: Glenda Raiti, a 37 years old lawyer, poses for a portrait at the Cortile Verga cocktail bar in Siracusa, Italy, on March 22nd 2018.<br />
<br />
Siacusa is considered one of the most coziest Italian cities.
    CIPG_20180322_GIOIA_Siracusa_M3_0272.jpg
  • SIRACUSA (SR) - 22 MARZO 2018: Glenda Raiti, avvocato di 37 anni, in posa per un ritratto al cocktail bar Cortile Verga a Siracusa il 22 marzo 2018. <br />
<br />
Siracusa è considerata tra le città più ospitali d'Italia.<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
SIRACUSA, ITALY - 22 MARCH 2018: Glenda Raiti, a 37 years old lawyer, poses for a portrait at the Cortile Verga cocktail bar in Siracusa, Italy, on March 22nd 2018.<br />
<br />
Siacusa is considered one of the most coziest Italian cities.
    CIPG_20180322_GIOIA_Siracusa_M3_0246.jpg
  • SIRACUSA (SR) - 22 MARZO 2018: Glenda Raiti, avvocato di 37 anni, in posa per un ritratto al cocktail bar Cortile Verga a Siracusa il 22 marzo 2018. <br />
<br />
Siracusa è considerata tra le città più ospitali d'Italia.<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
SIRACUSA, ITALY - 22 MARCH 2018: Glenda Raiti, a 37 years old lawyer, poses for a portrait at the Cortile Verga cocktail bar in Siracusa, Italy, on March 22nd 2018.<br />
<br />
Siacusa is considered one of the most coziest Italian cities.
    CIPG_20180322_GIOIA_Siracusa_M3_0240.jpg
  • SIRACUSA (SR) - 22 MARZO 2018: Glenda Raiti, avvocato di 37 anni, in posa per un ritratto al cocktail bar Cortile Verga a Siracusa il 22 marzo 2018. <br />
<br />
Siracusa è considerata tra le città più ospitali d'Italia.<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
SIRACUSA, ITALY - 22 MARCH 2018: Glenda Raiti, a 37 years old lawyer, poses for a portrait at the Cortile Verga cocktail bar in Siracusa, Italy, on March 22nd 2018.<br />
<br />
Siacusa is considered one of the most coziest Italian cities.
    CIPG_20180322_GIOIA_Siracusa_M3_0219.jpg
  • TUNIS, TUNISIA - 25 JULY 2013: Hedi Abidi (center), lawyer of the "Groupe des 25" and member of the Popular Front, rallies in Avenue Habib Bourguiba in front of the Interior Ministry to protest against the assassination of opposition leader Mohamed Brahmi in Tunis, Tunisia, on July 25th 2013.<br />
<br />
Tunisia, birthplace of the Arab Spring revolutionary movement, was plunged into a new political crisis on Thursday when assassins shot Mohamed Brahmi, 58, leader of the Arab nationalist People’s Party, an opposition party leader outside his home in a hail of gunfire.<br />
<br />
The assassination, which coincided with celebrations for the 56th anniversary of Tunisian statehood after independence from France, came as Tunisia was still grappling with a democratic transition following the January 2011 revolution that toppled the country’s autocratic leader, Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali, and forced him into exile. The Tunisian revolution was the catalyst that spawned similar uprisings in Egypt, Libya, Yemen and Syria.
    CIPG_20130725_NYT_Tunisia__MG_0283.jpg
  • TURIN, ITALY - 23 October 2013: Alessandro Ligi, a 49-years-old Roman lawyer whose unpublished novel is a tale of failed love, works on the assignment which consists in writing a one-page story from the point-of-view of a man who must watch while his lover marries someone else, during the first episode of talent show Masterpiece, at the state TV Rai studios  in Turin, Italy, on October 23rd 2013.<br />
<br />
Masterpiece is the first talent show for aspiring writers, produced by Rai and FremantleMedia.  The show's objective is to find new talents in Italian literature. 4,919 manuscripts were sent to the program and 80 have been selected for the final selections that will be broadcasted from the Masterpiece studio at the RAI headquarters of Turin starting November 17th on Rai3 national TV. The winner will have his novel co-distributed by RCS and Bompiani, two Italian publishers. <br />
<br />
The jury is composed of Andrea De Carlo (a Milan based author of 17 novels among which is "Due di due"), Giancarlo De Cataldo (magistrate, screenwriter and author of "Romanzo Criminale") and Taiye Selasi, author of TBK.
    CIPG_20131022_NYT_Masterpiece__M3_30...jpg
  • SIRACUSA (SR) - 22 MARZO 2018: Glenda Raiti, avvocato di 37 anni, in posa per un ritratto al cocktail bar Cortile Verga a Siracusa il 22 marzo 2018. <br />
<br />
Siracusa è considerata tra le città più ospitali d'Italia.<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
SIRACUSA, ITALY - 22 MARCH 2018: Glenda Raiti, a 37 years old lawyer, poses for a portrait at the Cortile Verga cocktail bar in Siracusa, Italy, on March 22nd 2018.<br />
<br />
Siacusa is considered one of the most coziest Italian cities.
    CIPG_20180322_GIOIA_Siracusa_M3_0529.jpg
  • SIRACUSA (SR) - 22 MARZO 2018: Glenda Raiti, avvocato di 37 anni, in posa per un ritratto al cocktail bar Cortile Verga a Siracusa il 22 marzo 2018. <br />
<br />
Siracusa è considerata tra le città più ospitali d'Italia.<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
SIRACUSA, ITALY - 22 MARCH 2018: Glenda Raiti, a 37 years old lawyer, poses for a portrait at the Cortile Verga cocktail bar in Siracusa, Italy, on March 22nd 2018.<br />
<br />
Siacusa is considered one of the most coziest Italian cities.
    CIPG_20180322_GIOIA_Siracusa_M3_0507.jpg
  • SIRACUSA (SR) - 22 MARZO 2018: Glenda Raiti, avvocato di 37 anni, in posa per un ritratto al cocktail bar Cortile Verga a Siracusa il 22 marzo 2018. <br />
<br />
Siracusa è considerata tra le città più ospitali d'Italia.<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
SIRACUSA, ITALY - 22 MARCH 2018: Glenda Raiti, a 37 years old lawyer, poses for a portrait at the Cortile Verga cocktail bar in Siracusa, Italy, on March 22nd 2018.<br />
<br />
Siacusa is considered one of the most coziest Italian cities.
    CIPG_20180322_GIOIA_Siracusa_M3_0421.jpg
  • SIRACUSA (SR) - 22 MARZO 2018: Glenda Raiti, avvocato di 37 anni, in posa per un ritratto al cocktail bar Cortile Verga a Siracusa il 22 marzo 2018. <br />
<br />
Siracusa è considerata tra le città più ospitali d'Italia.<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
SIRACUSA, ITALY - 22 MARCH 2018: Glenda Raiti, a 37 years old lawyer, poses for a portrait at the Cortile Verga cocktail bar in Siracusa, Italy, on March 22nd 2018.<br />
<br />
Siacusa is considered one of the most coziest Italian cities.
    CIPG_20180322_GIOIA_Siracusa_M3_0416.jpg
  • SIRACUSA (SR) - 22 MARZO 2018: Glenda Raiti, avvocato di 37 anni, in posa per un ritratto al cocktail bar Cortile Verga a Siracusa il 22 marzo 2018. <br />
<br />
Siracusa è considerata tra le città più ospitali d'Italia.<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
SIRACUSA, ITALY - 22 MARCH 2018: Glenda Raiti, a 37 years old lawyer, poses for a portrait at the Cortile Verga cocktail bar in Siracusa, Italy, on March 22nd 2018.<br />
<br />
Siacusa is considered one of the most coziest Italian cities.
    CIPG_20180322_GIOIA_Siracusa_M3_0407.jpg
  • SIRACUSA (SR) - 22 MARZO 2018: Glenda Raiti, avvocato di 37 anni, in posa per un ritratto al cocktail bar Cortile Verga a Siracusa il 22 marzo 2018. <br />
<br />
Siracusa è considerata tra le città più ospitali d'Italia.<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
SIRACUSA, ITALY - 22 MARCH 2018: Glenda Raiti, a 37 years old lawyer, poses for a portrait at the Cortile Verga cocktail bar in Siracusa, Italy, on March 22nd 2018.<br />
<br />
Siacusa is considered one of the most coziest Italian cities.
    CIPG_20180322_GIOIA_Siracusa_M3_0396.jpg
  • SIRACUSA (SR) - 22 MARZO 2018: Glenda Raiti, avvocato di 37 anni, in posa per un ritratto al cocktail bar Cortile Verga a Siracusa il 22 marzo 2018. <br />
<br />
Siracusa è considerata tra le città più ospitali d'Italia.<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
SIRACUSA, ITALY - 22 MARCH 2018: Glenda Raiti, a 37 years old lawyer, poses for a portrait at the Cortile Verga cocktail bar in Siracusa, Italy, on March 22nd 2018.<br />
<br />
Siacusa is considered one of the most coziest Italian cities.
    CIPG_20180322_GIOIA_Siracusa_M3_0382.jpg
  • SIRACUSA (SR) - 22 MARZO 2018: Glenda Raiti, avvocato di 37 anni, in posa per un ritratto al cocktail bar Cortile Verga a Siracusa il 22 marzo 2018. <br />
<br />
Siracusa è considerata tra le città più ospitali d'Italia.<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
SIRACUSA, ITALY - 22 MARCH 2018: Glenda Raiti, a 37 years old lawyer, poses for a portrait at the Cortile Verga cocktail bar in Siracusa, Italy, on March 22nd 2018.<br />
<br />
Siacusa is considered one of the most coziest Italian cities.
    CIPG_20180322_GIOIA_Siracusa_M3_0378.jpg
  • SIRACUSA (SR) - 22 MARZO 2018: Glenda Raiti, avvocato di 37 anni, in posa per un ritratto al cocktail bar Cortile Verga a Siracusa il 22 marzo 2018. <br />
<br />
Siracusa è considerata tra le città più ospitali d'Italia.<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
SIRACUSA, ITALY - 22 MARCH 2018: Glenda Raiti, a 37 years old lawyer, poses for a portrait at the Cortile Verga cocktail bar in Siracusa, Italy, on March 22nd 2018.<br />
<br />
Siacusa is considered one of the most coziest Italian cities.
    CIPG_20180322_GIOIA_Siracusa_M3_0375.jpg
  • SIRACUSA (SR) - 22 MARZO 2018: Glenda Raiti, avvocato di 37 anni, in posa per un ritratto al cocktail bar Cortile Verga a Siracusa il 22 marzo 2018. <br />
<br />
Siracusa è considerata tra le città più ospitali d'Italia.<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
SIRACUSA, ITALY - 22 MARCH 2018: Glenda Raiti, a 37 years old lawyer, poses for a portrait at the Cortile Verga cocktail bar in Siracusa, Italy, on March 22nd 2018.<br />
<br />
Siacusa is considered one of the most coziest Italian cities.
    CIPG_20180322_GIOIA_Siracusa_M3_0326.jpg
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