In 2013, real-life celebrity couple Mark Consuelos and Kelly Ripa did a short video clip for the Funny or Die series called “Bensonhurst Spelling Bee.” It consisted of students on-stage being asked to spell “eye-talian” words correctly (e.g. “gobbaghoul,” which is slang for capicola).  You get the picture. 

The words were provided to the students by, of all people, The Sopranos regulars Lorraine Bracco and Tony Sirico.  

But wait, it gets worse.

The kicker in the clip is that one of the students was an Italian American one played by the 14-year-old son of Ripa and Consuelos. He was dressed like a Jersey Shore goon and spoke with an exaggerated New Yawk accent. And he ends up winning the contest after a man in the audience (Consuelos) starts to object to the misuse of the Italian language. A small group of menacing-looking thugs behind him suddenly stand and give him a look which shuts the man up. Har har har.

At the time, proud Italian Americans bemoaned how these celebs could allow their young son to look and act like a gross Italic caricature. Mr. Consuelos is half-Mexican (father), but he also has an Italian mother who actually taught him the language as a child. Would he ever dis his father’s culture by having the young kid dressed like an El Chapo wannabe?

It spoke—still speaks—to how Italian culture has been degraded in American culture. Capeesh? 

Cut to 2025. Consuelos, though born in Zaragosa (founded by the Romans as “Caesar Augustus”), Spain, shuttled back and forth between Italy and Florida as a child, hence his proficiency in the language. It also developed in him a love of soccer. In 2022, he and his wife purchased a small-town Italian soccer team in Campobasso, Italy, an experience they will document in an upcoming ESPN series titled, Running with the Wolves. The four episodes will run at the end of July, and will no doubt be repeated afterward. 

I’ve yet to see any episodes but the clips on YouTube augur well. Soccer is the main topic, of course, but we also see Kelly and Mark and their now-grown children traipsing across Italy, a place they visit quite often. Will there be any cliches, as is usually the case when Italy is seen through an American’s eyes? Probably. Stanley Tucci’s shows are a prime example. 

Also interesting to note: Though Kelly Ripa is, as she has said publicly, “75% Italian American,” she doesn’t speak the language; however, her half-Mexican, half-Italian husband does. Here is yet another example—if needed—as to how so many non-Italians have a greater love, even respect, for Italian culture than Americans with roots in the boot. 

(Note: It was Mark’s idea to buy the team, not his wife’s. She thought he was planning to buy some property.) 

My main question: Will this series remove the bad taste of “Bensonhurst Spelling Bee?” It remains to be seen. 

Be that as it may, one has to commend Kelly and Mark for making la bell’italia a source of pride instead of cheap laughs. 

May the trend continue. -BDC