Political protest Italian–style: The blogosphere and mainstream
media in the promotion and coverage of Beppe Grillo’s V–day
by Alberto Pepe and Corinna di Gennaro.
First Monday, Volume 14, Number 12 - 7 December 2009
http://www.uic.edu/htbin/cgiwrap/bin/ojs/index.php/fm/article/viewArticle/2740/2406
ABSTRACT
We
analyze the organization, promotion and public perception of “V–day”, a
political rally that took place on 8 September 2007, to protest against
corruption in the Italian Parliament. Launched by blogger Beppe Grillo,
and promoted via a word–of–mouth mobilization on the Italian
blogosphere, V–day brought close to one million Italians in the streets
on a single day, but was mostly ignored by mainstream media. This
article is divided into two parts. In the first part, we analyze the
volume and content of online articles published by both bloggers and
mainstream news sources from 14 June (the day V–day was announced)
until 15 September 2007 (one week after it took place). We find that
the success of V–day can be attributed to the coverage of bloggers and
small–scale local news outlets only, suggesting a strong grassroots
component in the organization of the rally. We also find a dissonant
thematic relationship between content published by blogs and mainstream
media: while the majority of blogs analyzed promote V–day, major
mainstream media sources critique the methods of information production
and dissemination employed by Grillo. Based on this finding, in the
second part of the study, we explore the role of Grillo in the
organization of the rally from a network analysis perspective. We study
the interlinking structure of the V–day blogosphere network, to
determine its structure, its levels of heterogeneity, and resilience.
Our analysis contradicts the hypothesis that Grillo served as a
top–down, broadcast–like source of information. Rather, we find that
information about V–day was transferred across heterogeneous nodes in a
moderately robust and resilient core network of blogs. We speculate
that the organization of V–day represents the very first case, in
Italian history, of a political demonstration developed and promoted
primarily via the use of social media on the Web.