1Preface
43The Unabomber’s identikit and hypertrophy of ego
2Chapter 1
44Need and needs: emulation and recognition
3Tribute to violence
45The morbid interest in death and identifying with the killer
4Bodies, virtual and physical
46Aren’t you on TV? Not in the circus? You’re just about a nobody
5It’s not enough to show it, you need to explain it’s horrid as well
47Minors and television per Karl R. Popper and John Condry
6Lawyer analysts
48The bad and deceitful teacher, telling tall tales
7These days, nobody confesses any more
49Popper’s vision
8Capsizing of reality
50An unacceptable flight of ideas about death
9Pietro Grasso: “Simply put, they’re squalid killers”
51The pornography of death and pain television
10From zero to hero
52TV&Minori: a regulatory code
11The cultural aspect and parents’ teachings
53Cultural hegemony: a question of democracy
12Chapter 2
54Is Morcellini harming children?
13Cyberbullying
55Emotional mapping by Galimberti
14Domestic crimes committed by the young, emphasis and emulation
56All the more pessimistic
15Grand Theft Auto, irrefutable criminal evidence of the Werther effect at work
57An Internet of tortoise and hare
16Without inhibitions, free to imitate antiheroes
58The social effects of television
17Chapter 3
59Italian youngsters: children of a lesser God?
18Woman and her freedom to choose
60The new Media and Minors Committee
19Killing a female?
61Chapter 6
20Egotism, the common denominator
62The Werther effect: from suicide to homicide
21Off the peg
63An ample case history of chain murders
22Underestimating danger
64Women on high alert: the “like” for the emulation-provoking crime
23Resilience, an internal resource to weather crisis
65Killers by writing and video: missions to kill
24Beautiful stories unwritten
66A mission to kill, validated by clamour favouring serial killers and terrorists
25Culture makes for better human beings
67Terror by media as a propaganda technique
26Chapter 4
68The “luckiest” terrorists “in the world”
27From Goethe to Werther
69Copycat horror: the slippery slope leading to Daesh
28Not only suicides: the Werther effect on aggression
70No more making a spectacle of evil or giving jihadists that megaphone
29Controlling the Werther effect
71President Mattarella’s warning; BBC and Le Monde guidelines
30The advent of television doubled the incidence of violence
72The Daesh communication paradox, per Venturini
31Children’s exposure to television in terms of public health planning
73The Web is fragile, but can react
32Terror and communication strategy
74Symmetry of communication
33Propaganda that’s too much even for marketing giants
75Chapter 7
34Who does the advertising message target?
76The Internet, God’s gift
35A poor example of trash TV
77We knew the Web would take us where we wanted
36Hidden persuasion and subliminal messages
78The principle of rights to be guaranteed and communication symmetry
37The tachistoscope and the imperceptible measurement of image
79Times of disproportion and one-sided communication
38Chapter 5
80What becomes of Eco’s village idiot?
39Baby killers and serial killers
81The school bus driver who wanted to be a hero
40Unabomber, the increase in packaged explosives and pathological group conformity
82How much is an advert? Why are we gifting millions to criminality?
41Italy’s carbon copy of the Unabomber
83Rai, advertising rates
42Unabomber redundancy
84Bibliography