After this statement, the then-new management of RAI cancelled Biagi's, Santoro's and Luttazzi's respective shows, officially because "they were no longer competitive". Biagi and Santoro were allowed to work with RAI after Berlusconi's House of Freedoms was defeated in the 2006 Italian general election, but Daniele Luttazzi is still banned from RAI. He went back on television briefly when the La7 network hired him in 2007.
Aftermath for Enzo Biagi
Enzo Biagi began a controversy with the RAI, and initially his show, Il fatto was moved to a late time, then moved to the channelRai Treand in the end cancelled. Feeling himself mocked by the RAI, he decided not to renegotiate his contract with the network. The contract expired on December 31, 2002. Biagi continued to criticize Berlusconi in Italy's leading newspaper, Il Corriere della Sera, and was defended by the direction of the newspaper in an argument with Berlusconi. He reappeared on television on May 26, 2005, when he was interviewed by Fabio Fazio for Che tempo che fa of Rai Tre. He returned to Fazio's program twice. He was invited to the show Rockpolitic along with Luttazzi and Santoro for an episode about freedom of press, but he and Luttazzi declined to appear, because the show was on Rai1, whose director approved of "Editto Bulgaro". On April 22, 2007 he returned to TV with a program called RT - Rotocalco Televisivo, but after seven episodes he could not continue due to his worsening health. He died ten days afterwards, on November 6, 2007, in Milan, at the age of 87.
Aftermath for Michele Santoro
, Berlusconi's party, sued RAI because of Santoro's show on six separate counts, which led to Santoro's dismissal. Santoro sued RAI for unfair dismissal, and won the case in 2005, with a compensation of €1,400,000 and the reintegration in the same time range in TV with the programAnno Zero.
Aftermath for Daniele Luttazzi
Luttazzi's show Satyricon was suspended in December 2002. Satyricon had high shares, with audience peaks of 7.5 million. Officially, the suspension of Luttazzi's show, as well as of Biagi's, were motivated by the necessity of RAI to counter the competition. Moreover, Luttazzi's show had already generated controversy at least on two separate occasions: in parodying David Letterman, he sniffed actress Anna Falchi's panties after she'd taken them off and given them to him; in a later show, he simulated coprophagia. Such episodes were later used among the official motivations for the suspension of the show. On the other hand, Luttazzi claims the real reason was his interview of journalistMarco Travaglio, aired before the official start of the 2001 general elections campaign. In this interview, Travaglio talked about his book L'odore dei soldi, in which he questioned the obscure origin of Berlusconi's wealth at the beginning of his career, and the alleged liaisons of him and one of his closest aides with the Mafia. Following the interview, in fact, Luttazzi and Travaglio were sued separately by Berlusconi, his party Forza Italia, the enterprises Fininvest and Mediaset. The two were accused of having damaged Berlusconi's image during the campaign as well as the image of the above-mentioned enterprises. Both Luttazzi and Travaglio were later ruled not guilty. A later edition of L'odore dei soldi triumphantly read on the cover "the authors released , Berlusconi ruled to pay for legal expenses". Luttazzi is still banned from RAI. He went back on TV in 2007, when the network La7 hosted some episodes of his new show, Decameron, until its abrupt cancellation in December. The official motivation was a crude joke addressed to journalist Giuliano Ferrara, a well-known supporter of Berlusconi and former Minister for the Relationship with the Parliament. Ferrara hosted his own show on La7, Otto e Mezzo, and the network claimed that Luttazzi, by offending him with the above-mentioned joke, had gone too far. Luttazzi claimed the alleged offence to Ferrara was a scapegoat, as the opening monologue in the next episode of his show, already taped, was focusing on the pope, Luttazzi hinting that the network wanted to prevent that episode from being aired. 2012: Luttazzi wins his legal battle against La7. La7 shall pay Luttazzi 1 million 2 hundred thousand euros.