0137 (talk show)

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Television series
Original title 0137
Country of production Germany
Year (s) February 28, 1991 -
February 28, 1994
length 45 minutes
Broadcasting
cycle
working days
genre Talk show
Moderation see below
First broadcast 1991 to premiere

0137 was a live talk show on the pay TV channel Premiere , which was broadcast in an unencrypted time slot in order to interest viewers in the then new pay TV . The advertising slogan of the series was "Talk without taboo".

Conception

The broadcast concept of 0137 goes back to an idea of ​​media manager Markus Peichl . The structure of the thematically diversified program consisted of three short interviews of 15 minutes each working day from 7.30 p.m. The third guest was selected by the audience by telephone voting (TED) using the area code 0137 . The audience was able to vote on three possible guests in the previous broadcast. The spectrum of interview partners was based on newspaper sections and consisted of the following areas: firstly, the political part, secondly, current background and thirdly, miscellaneous items. The documentation department at Verlag Gruner + Jahr worked with the Premiere editorial team to research the many interview guests and topics .

The series showed no advertising. The studio facilities were kept very simple, no studio audience was used and no films were recorded except for direct broadcasts. "This puristic presentation soon turned out to be the real strength of the format , because the focus was exclusively on the impressive conversations, which many critics liked."

0137 as “a well-respected but unprofitable advertising campaign” was discontinued until “Premiere with around 800,000 subscribers had gathered enough paying customers”.

The program 0137 had an offshoot called 0137 Night Talk from May 1993 , which was moderated by Bettina Rust .

Moderators

Moderators of the shipment were Roger Willemsen , Sandra Maischberger (1992), Margret Deckenbrock (1993), Hubert Winkels (1993) and Sabine Brandi (1993). Willemsen and Maischberger shared an office and temporarily became a couple.

reception

It "[the moderators] always succeeded in mastering the enormous range of topics and the delicate balancing act between sensationalism and serious journalism. At the same time, they prevented tabloid, intimate or controversial topics from being treated too sensationally or from getting into the dirty corner ”.

“During three quarters of an hour of broadcasting time, the host receives three interlocutors with whom he strives for something that is completely unusual in conventional talk shows: a conversation. 15 minutes per person - it happens that people can finish speaking. "

Awards

literature

  • Roger Willemsen: At the border. Talks with assassins, bank robbers, murderers, political prisoners, car crackers, death row inmates and victims of violence. Kiepenheuer and Witsch, Cologne 1994, ISBN 3-462-02317-9 , review.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d e f Christian Richter: The television cemetery: Like a BILD newspaper with class. In: quotenmeter.de , July 30, 2015.
  2. a b c d Kirsten Haake: "0137" moderator Roger Willemsen. The Musil man. In: Medium Magazin , 1992, No. 5, pp. 4–7, (PDF; 3.44 MB).
  3. ^ Willi Winkler : Profile. Markus Peichl. In: Süddeutsche Zeitung , August 30, 2017.
  4. a b N.N. : Moderators. Right or wrong? Brisk sayings, cheeky questions - a new generation of television journalists is creating a new tone on the screen. In: Der Spiegel , June 17, 1991.
  5. Michael Reufsteck , Stefan Niggemeier : 0137. Puristic interview broadcast with Roger Willemsen. In: fernsehserien.de / Das Fernsehlexikon , Goldmann, Munich 2005, ISBN 978-3-442-30124-9 .
  6. Heide-Ulrike Wendt: The art of the question: Sandra Maischberger. In: heideulrikewendt.de , 2000.
  7. ^ Roger Willemsen - biography. ( Memento from April 23, 2015 in the Internet Archive ). In: roger-willemsen.de .
  8. Jury statement: 0137 - Interviews with Roger Willemsen. In: Adolf Grimme Prize , 1993.