Chili Society with Dominic Heinzl

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Television broadcast
German title CHILI - Society with Dominic Heinzl
Chililogo.gif
Country of production Austria
original language German
Year (s) 2010–2012
length 5 minutes
First broadcast January 11, 2010 ( Austria ) on ORF eins

Chili - Society with Dominic Heinzl , or mostly just Chili, was an Austrian society magazine that dealt with gossip from the national and international celebrity scene, trends from fashion and lifestyle and news from the film and cinema scene. The show was broadcast on ORF eins (formerly ORF 1) from January 11, 2010 and moderated by Dominic Heinzl .

background

Hi Society on ATV

After Dominic Heinzl had worked for ORF in the 1980s and 1990s at the meeting point Ö3 and the youth and music program X-Large , he hosted the society magazine Hi Society from 1997 to the end of 2009 on the Austrian private broadcaster ATV , which he ran with his own company Chili TV GmbH radio & TV production has produced.

Change to ORF

On September 2, 2009, ORF General Director Alexander Wrabetz announced in a press conference that Heinzl would have his own daily broadcast on ORF from January 2010. Wrabetz was very pleased with the transfer of the long-time Ö3 and ORF presenter: "With Dominic Heinzl, the ORF has achieved a top transfer that will ensure the program of blood refreshment". Minutes before the press conference, the private broadcaster ATV announced that it would part ways with Heinzl in 2010. "After more than ten years, society reporting on parties, celebrities, restaurant and store openings has reached its zenith," said ATV managing director Ludwig Bauer. Hi Society was replaced in February 2010 by the new tabloid magazine ATV Life with Volker Piesczek and Kerstin Ruhri as moderators.

At the end of 2009, a concrete concept for the new ORF broadcast, which, like Society, is also produced by Heinzl's own company chili.tv , was presented. The genre and the moderator remain the same, according to the ORF, essentially only “studio, broadcaster, content, packaging and variety of topics” change.

publication

First broadcast

Chili was broadcast for the first time on January 11, 2010 on ORF eins . Dominic Heinzl presented himself in the usual way, but in a new studio. Starting at 7:20 p.m., Heinzl presented the two magazines Backstage and the subsequent chili every day . These were two separate programs, but they belonged to the same genre and practically conveyed the same content. These were only interrupted by a single advertising block. Backstage was conceived by ORF as a “preliminary program” before Chili . After a ruling by the Federal Communications Senate, according to which the commercial interruption between the societymagazines violated the ORF law, the ORF was forced to act.

Audience ratings

On Monday, the day the chilli was first broadcast, there was great interest. Since then, the audience has been steadily downhill, but the ORF was still satisfied. According to ORF communications director Pius Strobl, "the flow is right". Chili “gets time to find its viewers” ​​because “TV habits don't change in a day”. At the same time (7.30 p.m.) ORF 2 ran the newscast Zeit im Bild as well as the weather and sports news, which are seen by around 1.1 million viewers every day. When asked whether this is no competition for Chili , Strobl replied: "Better to have competition in-house than not at all with ORF".

Backstage was discontinued on July 30, 2010. Chili was shortened to 10 minutes on September 6, 2010 and moved to a different slot. From September 2012, the program will only run for five minutes.

date "Backstage" "Chili"
January 11, 2010 356,000 seers 405,000 seers
January 12, 2010 199,000 seers 359,000 seers
January 13, 2010 226,000 seers 174,000 seers
January 14, 2010 244,000 seers 193,000 seers
July 30, 2010 1 79,000 seers 89,000 seers

1) Last broadcast of Backstage and of Chili in the previous format.

Cancellation of the broadcast

In October 2012, Heinzl announced via Facebook that the contract for the broadcast, which runs until the end of 2012, will not be extended by ORF.

Individual evidence

  1. Archive link ( Memento of the original from July 1, 2011 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and not yet checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.  @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / tv.orf.at
  2. Dominic Heinzl returns to ORF. In: oesterreich.orf.at. September 2, 2009. Retrieved November 24, 2017 .
  3. http://www.tvmatrix.at/?newsid=10981
  4. derStandard.at ORF tilts backstage
  5. http://derstandard.at/1262209521030/Chili-Quoten-Tag-3-226000-am-Mittwoch---Strobl-Chili-bekommen-Zeit-seine-Zuseherinnen-zu-find
  6. ORF better broadcasting slots and fixed main evening date ( memento of the original from September 17, 2011 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / kundendienst.orf.at
  7. http://derstandard.at/1262209357785/ORF-zufrieden-Heinzl-Formate-im-Schatten-der-Seitenblicke
  8. http://derstandard.at/1262209427024/Chili-Quoten-Tag-2-359000-Zuschauerinnen-am-Dienstag
  9. http://derstandard.at/1262209521030/Chili-Quoten-Tag-3-226000-am-Mittwoch---Strobl-Chili-bekommen-Zeit-seine-Zuseherinnen-zu-find
  10. http://derstandard.at/1262209610059/Chili-Quoten-Tag-4-244000-Zuschauerinnen-am-Donnerstag
  11. Archive link ( Memento of the original from January 31, 2012 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and not yet checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. accessed on August 3, 2010, only available for one week. Then use the archive link ( Memento from August 3, 2010 on WebCite )  @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / mediaresearch.orf.at
  12. After Sido punch: Basher and trolls attack Dominic Heinzl. In: derstandard.at . October 23, 2012, accessed on October 23, 2012 (German).

Web links