German television broadcasting
German television broadcasting | |
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Station logo | |
General information | |
Reception: | analog: antenna |
Seat: | Berlin , GDR |
Broadcasting company: | German television broadcasting (television of the GDR) |
Start of broadcast: | December 20, 1951 |
Closing date: | December 15, 1990 (1st stage of shutdown) December 31, 1991 (complete shutdown) |
Legal form: | 1951–1990: State broadcasting company , 1990: public broadcasting company, 1990–1991: state-independent, legal entity |
Program type: | Full program |
List of TV channels |
Deutscher Fernsehfunk ( DFF ; between 1972 and 1990 television of the GDR ) was the state television of the German Democratic Republic .
history
1950–1956: from the television center to the DFF
Hans Mahle was the pioneer of television in the GDR . On June 11, 1950, the groundbreaking ceremony for the Berlin TV Center (FZ) in Berlin-Adlershof took place under his general directorate for radio . The first attempts at transmission and reception began on December 20, 1951 - but only for technicians and specialists, because the first public television sets were not installed until July 29, 1952. A first small picture transmitter (800 W) was installed in Berlin-Mitte on the old townhouse in February 1952 and connected to Adlershof via radio relay on June 3rd . In August 1952, the Rhinelander Hermann Zilles became the director of the television center. The first television radio receivers were sold in the GDR from November 16, 1952. The Leningrad device manufactured in the Sachsenwerk Radeberg initially cost DM 3,500 , with an average monthly income of around DM 300 at the time . However, until production ceased in 1954, only around 3,000 Leningrad devices were sold in the GDR, the main production of around 130,600 devices had to be be delivered to the Soviet Union as reparations . The area coverage with televisions in Berlin and the GDR was initially extremely low.
On December 21, 1952 - in honor of the 74th birthday of Josef Stalin - the “public test program” started with two hours of broadcasting time every day from 8 p.m. and the Brandenburg Gate as the logo. About 60 devices were ready to receive in the GDR, all of them in Berlin. After the greeting by the announcer Margit Schaumäker , greetings from the television management followed and finally the current camera (AK) with speaker Herbert Köfer . As the oldest German television news program, the AK remained until December 14, 1990. However, in the early years , the AK was not yet an SED mouthpiece, as television was not yet a mass medium and anything but up-to-date. Soon the Tagesschau and also the AK became more popular and effective than the newsreels in the cinemas because of their topicality. The DEFA weekly show Der Augenzeuge still provided objective information. This also applies to the events on June 17, 1953 , the day of the workers' uprising in the GDR, and the days that followed. However, intendant Zilles was dismissed. His successor was Heinz Adameck in the summer of 1954 and remained so until the fall of the Berlin Wall .
In order to reach more viewers, the network was quickly expanded. 1953 Berlin-Grünau (in the Müggelberge ), Dresden, 1955 Berlin-Mitte, Brocken, Inselsberg, Helpterberg, Marlow, Chemnitz and 1956 Berlin-Köpenick , whereby Brocken and Inselsberg also shone far to West Germany. Technology and television studios were also expanded rapidly. In the summer of 1953, Studio I was opened on the Berlin-Adlershof site . In 1955 there was a first outside broadcast vehicle and a third broadcasting studio.
1956–1972: from DFF to GDR television
On January 2, 1956, the official test program of the Berlin TV Center ended and on January 3, the German TV Broadcasting Corporation (DFF) began its program. The station was politically not initially called the GDR television . The DFF wanted to be television for all of Germany. Despite broadcasters close to the border, the DFF was physically unable to supply the entire Federal Republic of Germany, while ARD later reached the entire GDR with the exception of the Elbe valley , the so-called " Valley of the Unsuspecting ", and the northeast (including Stralsund, Greifswald).
At the end of 1958, over 300,000 televisions were registered in the GDR. From October 7, 1958, the morning program was introduced as a repetition of the program for late workers. One day later, an evening greeting followed for the first time . The evening greeting from television became an export hit from November 22, 1959 onwards as part of the program Our Sandman , and it survived the station's closure in 1991. Today, however, the name television radio can no longer be heard in the Sandmann Lied, as the second stanza in question has been omitted.
On October 3, 1969, the second program of the German television station DFF 2 went on air for the first time as a color program on the occasion of the upcoming 20th anniversary of the founding of the GDR . This marked the beginning of the age of color television for German television broadcasting. Walter Ulbricht opened the program with the words "The second TV program has opened".
With the addition of the second program, the number of broadcast hours produced also increased. The broadcast was in the color transmission system SECAM III b , in contrast to the West German PAL system (SECAM was and is used in some countries in Eastern Europe and France). However, the video / sound carrier spacing according to CCIR (5.5 MHz) was used, so that German viewers from the other part of Germany could receive the sound, but only a black and white picture (TVs with both color systems were only produced in the 1970s). The sound carrier spacing usual in Eastern Europe was 6.5 MHz according to OIRT - so the GDR system was not compatible with either the West or the East. Resourceful technicians soon found ways of upgrading the GDR devices (the first GDR color television set and the first fully transistorized color television in Europe was the Color 20, later followed by Rubin and Raduga from the USSR) by installing PAL decoders or PAL / SECAM combi decoders. The modules came from handicraftsmen's hands or later from GDR production, because color televisions were now being produced here for the German market. It was not until much later ( Chromat 1060 , approx. 1978) that devices were also sold in the GDR that could receive both SECAM and PAL. The color broadcasts were initially only transferred to DFF 2. A few years later, the main program for color broadcasts was also upgraded.
year | 1955 | 1960 | 1965 | 1970 | 1975 | 1980 | 1985 | 1988 | 1989 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Broadcast hours / year | 786 | 3007 | 3774 | 6,028 | 6,851 | 7,704 | 8,265 | 9,194 | 8,900 |
Average Broadcast hours / week | 15th | 58 | 73 | 116 | 132 | 148 | 159 | 177 | 171 |
1972–1989: TV in the GDR
On February 11, 1972, the DFF was renamed and from then on was called the GDR television. The old name only survived in credits, quotes and the sandman in the evening greeting from television .
The rumor that GDR television planned for political reasons at the time to broadcast the Olympic Games in Moscow in PAL and had therefore broadcast PAL test programs beforehand is unfounded. On the one hand, Adlershof television was not materially capable of broadcasting PAL at that time, because the mixer and infrastructure were consistently implemented using SECAM technology. Transcoders were also not available in sufficient quantities. On the other hand, there was no nationwide equipment with multi-standard color television sets at that time, so that PAL broadcasts of sports programs would have been an affront for the GDR population.
The so-called main control room II with Marconi cameras and a SECAM mixer from Thomson went into operation as the first color control room in 1969 . Control rooms II and III in the production complex S4 were converted from SW to color by the image measurement technology and contained a single-level SECAM mixer, with which you could fade in and out smoothly or with tricks, as well as scanning out fonts. In 1975/1976 the new control room 5 of the current camera in the newly built complex S5a with a multi-level SECAM mixer went into operation. This was an anticipation of the later RFZ mixer and was developed by image measurement technology using various components together with the Central Radio and Television Office (RFZ) .
In the mid-1970s, studios A to F in complex S1 (now Studio Berlin) went into operation, but initially did not have their own image control room. It was not until the years 1977 to 1980 that video technology was increasingly installed. Multi-level SECAM mixers from the RFZ Berlin and Soviet camera technology were used, initially the KT-116 cameras and later the KT-132. The concept envisaged a joint direction for two studios because it was assumed that one studio would produce while the next production was being prepared in the neighboring studio. However, it soon became apparent that these preparations were taking much less time than expected. Right from the start there was a bottleneck in directing capacity in S1, which could only be compensated for by producing an OB van. That is why some of the studios were and still are played with OB vans to this day. Because there were both SECAM and PAL OB vans in GDR times, production and recording were carried out there in both PAL and SECAM.
Control rooms 2 to 4 in the new S4a building had multi-level SECAM mixers at the RFZ Berlin when they were commissioned in the early 1980s. Later control room 3 and control room 4 received component mixers from Grass Valley (GVG-300 and GVG-110). At this point in time, control room 5 and HR II were also converted to component mixers (the latter eventually housed Elf 99 ). Here, modified RFZ mixers were used in conjunction with component crossbars from Probel . Around 1989/1990, control rooms 3, 4, 5 and HR II were converted to analog component technology, which made it possible to switch from SECAM to PAL "overnight" by exchanging the coders.
In addition to Sony technology and technology from Darmstadt TV GmbH, which later renamed its name several times and changed its name (Bosch, BTS, Philips, Thomson, today Grass Valley), television technology from many other manufacturers was used, such as Marconi, Philips, Probel, Aston , the RFZ and RFT , as well as cameras, monitors and OB vans from the USSR.
1989–1990: the turning point
The political change in the GDR in 1989 also meant a stronger separation from state power for the media. In the political broadcasts it was possible to report more and more freely and numerous new programs went on air.
When the broadcaster was still under the control of the state, the youth program Elf 99 (based on the station's zip code at that time in 1199 Berlin-Adlershof ) went on air on September 1, 1989 . The SED wanted to attract more young viewers to the GDR programs, which were based on the Western media.
Initially the mass exodus and protests were hardly mentioned in the political broadcasts, but at the end of October 1989 that changed suddenly. On October 18, 1989, Erich Honecker and other members of the political bureau in power of the SED Central Committee resigned. Immediately afterwards, radio and television reformed their programs. On October 30, 1989, the propaganda program The Black Channel was discontinued. From now on, plain text should be spoken. The employees of this new magazine program had forced the removal of the Black Canal and of Karl-Eduard von Schnitzler .
On November 4, 1989, employees and actors of the television of the GDR were among the organizers and participants of the Alexanderplatz demonstration in East Berlin . For the unique event in the history of the GDR, at which, according to the organizers, a million people called for fundamental changes, the Association of Film and Television Creators , the Committee for Entertainment Arts and other artists' associations acted as official organizers.
The new issue of AK Zwo of the news program Current Camera began broadcasting. A little later, on the occasion of the fall of the Berlin Wall on November 9, 1989, the West broadcaster 3sat took over this program . When the DFF became a member of 3sat in February 1990, a number of new programs were developed and started, including the controversial talk show Thursday Talk with audience participation by telephone, which was initially watched carefully in the studio by the Ministry for State Security (GDR secret service).
In February 1990, a media decision declared the People's Chamber , the television of the GDR into a politically independent public service broadcaster . The GDR Media Act of September 1990 confirmed this status.
On March 12, 1990 the programs DDR-F1 and DDR-F2 became DFF 1 and DFF 2 again .
In mid-1990 it became apparent that the countries that were dissolved in 1952 would be reintroduced, and television and radio were increasingly making reporting more regional. These were produced in the existing studios. A new one was set up in Gera for Thuringia . The broadcast for the state of Brandenburg was produced in Berlin-Adlershof. Regional correspondent offices were set up in Erfurt, Potsdam, Schwerin, Leipzig, Magdeburg and Cottbus. The studios were neither legally nor financially independent. On August 13, 1990, the DFF began broadcasting daily state programs. Initially, each national program broadcast one day a week, later daily with the help of a breakdown.
1990–1991: the shutdown
With the German reunification on October 3, 1990, the DFF lost its independence under public law and was continued together with the radio of the GDR and the broadcasting and studio technology of the Deutsche Post as a so-called state - independent, legally competent body according to Art. 36 Unification Treaty. Article 36 of the Unification Treaty also stipulates that the facility with all program material, real estate, employees and other property must be dissolved by December 31, 1991 at the latest. Before reunification, the People's Chamber of the GDR had not appointed its own broadcasting officer. Thus Rudolf Mühlfenzl ( CSU ) as a radio officer determines that the leadership and management took over.
The first stage of the shutdown took place on December 15, 1990 at 7:58 p.m. The first German television took over the broadcasting chain of the previous DFF 1 . The transmission power of the former Brocken (Channel 6) and Inselsberg (Channel 5) transmitters near the border was later reduced. From now on, the DFF used the lower-range UHF transmitter chain of DFF 2 to distribute the DFF country chain . At the same time, on the night of December 14th to 15th, the East German color television standard was changed from SECAM to PAL . A PAL decoder was therefore necessary for color reproduction on older SECAM television receivers.
At that time, the common television program of the ARD in was first between 17:25 to 20:00 connected regionally apart and by the relevant institutions with regional information programs and TV shows recorded. As there were no ARD broadcasters in the new federal states, the institution's regional broadcasters broadcast regional programs on the former DFF 1 channels .
With the second stage of the shutdown, the broadcasting of German television was stopped on December 31, 1991 at midnight. In a speech given by radio commissioner Rudolf Mühlfenzl on the broadcasting regulations in East Germany that came into effect from midnight, which was broadcast on the DFF country chain at 19:50 on New Year's Eve 1991, Mühlfenzl explained the shutdown of the DFF.
Inherit
The dissolution of the facility was discussed controversially until the end. Not only their employees wanted to keep the channels, many viewers didn't want to miss the programs either. Not only entertainment and advice programs were popular, but also political programs since the fall of the Wall. The idea of continuing radio and television in a new ARD company for the eastern German states with the DFF country chain as the third television program was not taken up by the eastern German states when they set up new public broadcasters. Instead, after years of centralized media policy, the media locations were decentralized.
The states of Saxony , Saxony-Anhalt and Thuringia came to an agreement very early on and on May 31, 1991 founded the Mitteldeutscher Rundfunk (MDR) based in Leipzig. Various constellations were discussed for north-east Germany, such as B. the establishment of a Northeast German Broadcasting Corporation (NORA) between the states of Berlin , Brandenburg and Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania or a joint broadcasting company for Berlin and Brandenburg. However, no agreement could be reached, so Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania joined the North German Broadcasting Corporation (NDR), the Sender Free Berlin (SFB) broadcasted for all of Berlin from now on, and in the state of Brandenburg on October 12, 1991, the East German Broadcasting Corporation ( ODR) was founded. This was renamed Ostdeutscher Rundfunk Brandenburg (ORB) about two weeks before the broadcast began . With effect from May 1, 2003 , the ORB and the Sender Freies Berlin (SFB) merged to form the new Rundfunk Berlin-Brandenburg (RBB).
The new stations started broadcasting on January 1, 1992, midnight - immediately after the DFF had closed. Actually, the DFF was not allowed to continue transmitting a second after midnight - but a few seconds passed before it actually switched. Several stations that now broadcast the MDR television program (including Brocken, Dresden) then broadcast the MDR image for minutes with the sound of the ORB and its director Hansjürgen Rosenbauer .
The MDR in particular is enjoying a high level of public acceptance today. It is viewed by many viewers as the successor, not least because of the numerous DFF productions that are broadcast over and over again, some programs from the earlier DFF program (for example “Outsider Front Runner”) and earlier DFF faces.
The property was partly taken over by the newly founded institutions. It was considered to sell the programming assets to the Kirch group . Ultimately, however, the German Broadcasting Archive (DRA) Frankfurt am Main took over the holdings, which can also be used by private users. It set up a second office in the premises of the Adlershof archive. The DFF archive is now located in a new DRA building in Potsdam-Babelsberg . However, the period from 1952 to 1962 is missing, as almost nothing could be recorded during this time. The Müncheberg Archive in Schöneiche near Berlin was able to secure and catalog materials from this period . Parts of the extensive DFF fund are now secured in the Adlershof prop and costume fund, which also includes the film Good Bye, Lenin! significantly supported with loans.
Some of the formerly around 10,000 employees were able to find a job with the new or West German broadcasters or with private radio .
Many of the buildings, including those on DEFA's neighboring Johannisthal site , were demolished. The former DFF administration building remained under a preservation order. Some studios and buildings were taken over in 1994 by the newly founded Studio Hamburg subsidiary Studio Berlin Adlershof , which now offers services for television and film productions there. A growing number of small and medium-sized media companies are also based on the site. The former site of the DFF now belongs together with the DEFA Johannisthal and the Academy of Sciences of the GDR for science and business center Adlershof (WISTA) .
The processing of the program history of the DFF is the subject of scientific studies within the framework of the project program history of GDR television comparative , which is funded by the German Research Foundation (DFG).
management
The governing body for radio and television was the State Broadcasting Committee since 1952 . On September 15, 1968, an independent State Committee for Television was formed. Its chairman was from 1968 to 1989 Heinz Adameck (member of the agitation commission in the Central Committee of the SED ). Up until October 1989, the political magazines and news broadcasts were very heavily controlled and directly influenced by the respective SED Central Committee Secretary for Agitation; in the last years of the GDR this was Joachim Herrmann .
The Modrow -Regierung invoked after the turn Hans Bentzien for directors. In June 1990 the DFF cameraman and today's ARD digital director Michael Albrecht was declared the last director.
The directors of the DFF
- 1950–1952: Hans Mahle (General Manager)
- 1952–1953: Hermann Zilles ( Artistic Director)
- 1954–1989: Heinz Adameck ( Artistic Director)
- 1989–1990: Hans Bentzien (General Manager)
- 1990–1991: Michael Albrecht (Artistic Director)
- 1991: Holm Freier (acting director from the end of November 1991 to December 31, 1991 after Michael Albrecht switched to ODR / ORB)
Well-known programs
politics
- Current camera - a news broadcast
- The black channel - a political magazine
- Objective - a foreign policy magazine, with chief correspondent Ulrich Makosch
- Prisma - domestic politics magazine, u. a. with Gerhard Scheumann , Karl-Heinz Gerstner , Axel Kaspar
- Radar - military policy magazine
- Race against time - magazine about technological change in industry
Regional broadcasts (August 1990 - December 1991)
- With us in Saxony - for Saxony
- Landesschau - for Brandenburg (started as “LSB aktuell”) with Andrea Kiewel and Michael Illner
- Nordmagazin - for Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania
- Pictures of the day - for Saxony-Anhalt
- Thuringia Journal - for Thuringia
Magazines
- Aha - Subtitle Das Wissenschaftsmagazin (Mondays, 7:00 p.m.)
- Everything that is right - legal advisor with Friedrich Wolff
- Berufe im Bild - magazine for career choices
- Computerstunde - advisory magazine on the subject of computers
- The college of professors meets - a discussion with professors led by Hans Jacobus
- The traffic magazine - from 1964 "From the world of traffic", from 1968 trafficmagazine, moderator: Walter Becker (407 issues up to January 5, 1984), later lieutenant colonel of the VP Rolf-Dieter Saternus
- The TV chef recommends - with Kurt Drummer
- Dorf modern - agricultural magazine
- You and your garden - with Erika Krause (1968–2003 / ORB)
- You and your pet - with Gudrun Thiele (1981–1991)
- Parents' consultation - with Doris Weikow
- Driving break - traffic magazine
- Ask Prof. Kaul with Friedrich Karl Kaul
- HAPS (Household Allerlei Practically Served) - cooking and household broadcast from the Ostseestudio Rostock with Elke Bendien and Bernd Freitag
- Hobbies, tips, that's how it's done - interior design magazine
- Journal for you - advice for women
- Modekiste - with Monika Unferferth
- He and She and 1000 Questions - Partnership Guide
- Tierparkteletreff - with Heinrich Dathe and Annemarie Brodhagen
- Tip des Fischkochs - with Rudolf Kroboth (1960–1970), later with Rainer Kroboth (son of Rudolf Kroboth, until 1972)
- Meeting point cinema - movie preview
- Umschau - News from science and technology from May 18, 1961, oldest regularly broadcast magazine on German television (now on mdr)
- Traffic Compass - Equivalent to The 7th Sense
- Visite - health magazine with Rudolf Arndt from the Ostseestudio Rostock , now on NDR television from Hamburg
- From head to toe - a magazine for sewing, knitting, darning
- By educators - for educators - advice magazine for school conflicts
entertainment
- Achim's hit parade - folksy, with Achim Mentzel
- Everything sings - music broadcast with various choirs, moderated by Hans-Georg Ponesky
- For half an hour - talk show-like portrait broadcast
- On shoemaker's pony with Gerhard Neef
- Outsider front runner - curiosities, with Hans-Joachim Wolfram
- Bong - national hit parade, with Jürgen Karney
- Burgparty - entertainment broadcast by the Halle studio, with Armin Mueller-Stahl , u. a. with the only appearance of Roy Black in the GDR
- The bear laughs - the first entertainment show in the GDR
- There is music in there - music show with Kammersänger Reiner Süß
- This is music for you - TV show presented by Petra Kusch-Lück
- The blue window - television history and stories, with Herbert Köfer
- The public prosecutor has the floor - series with public prosecutor Peter Przybylski
- The wish mailbox - with the moderators Gerd E. Schäfer / Uta Schorn and Lutz Jahoda / Heidi Weigelt
- The golden note - TV show
- Marriage ring free! - Saturday evening show for unmarried couples
- A house full of music - TV show in which the wishes of residents of a house somewhere in the GDR were collected and fulfilled
- A Kessel Buntes - bi-monthly entertainment show with changing moderators who came from the most diverse fields of public life or entertainment
- Once a year - the hit of the year, presented by Chris Wallasch
- Bergkristall holiday home - six-part comedy series that was broadcast on New Year's Eve from 1983 to 1987. The last part was broadcast on New Year's Eve 1989 after a year break due to illness.
- You have to be lucky - with Wolfgang Lippert
- Heart pounding for free - talent show, with "Heinz der Quermann"
- Tonight No. 1 - various GDR stars got the chance for their own show with many guests for 90 minutes
- Im Bilde - TV magazine for the hearing impaired
- In the Krug zum Grünen Kranze - folk and pop music show ,with Maria Meltke , Wolfgang Gneuss
- Cinema music - with Dagmar Frederic
- Klock 8, aft Strom (Hafenbar) - maritime entertainment program from the Ostseestudio Rostock , with Rica Déus and Horst Köbbert . Director: Manfred Spitz
- Klönsnack - talk show of the Ostseestudios Rostock from Warnemünde, directed by Helga Brenner
- Songs, country and people - with Barbara Kellerbauer
- Maxe Baumann - seven-part comedy series that was broadcast on New Year's Eve from 1976 to 1982. There was also a special on May 1, 1987.
- People and the sea -aninternational song festival producedby the Ostseestudio Rostock as an intervision broadcast. Director: Manfred Spitz . Moderation: Horst Köbbert
- With Lutz and love - amusingly designed 45-minute fairy tales, musically accompanied by host Lutz Jahoda
- Music that brings you joy - colorful show with your hosts Dagmar Frederic and Petr Altmann
- Musicians are there - international folk music show presented by the hit duo Hauff / Henkler
- Music and snacks in front of the harbor - maritime entertainment broadcast by the Ostseestudios Rostock . Moderators: Horst Köbbert , Hans-Jörg Goldhofer , Captain Gerd Peters . Directors: Helga Brenner , Heinrich Westphal , Roland Jeschke
- Celebrity Night - TV stars in the circus arena (every 2nd Christmas day)
- Oberhof farmers market - folk music show with Rosemarie Ambé and Fred Schmidt
- Portrait by phone - talk show with questions from the audience, moderated by Heinz Florian Oertel
- Program next door - entertainment program with contributions from foreign TV stations
- Lumber room - excerpts from old films, with Willi Schwabe
- round - politically colored entertainment and music show of the youth organization FDJ u. a. with Bodo Freudl
- Guess what - guess show
- Hit of a small town - with Heinz Florian Oertel
- Beat Studio - with Chris Wallasch
- Schlager competition
- Showkolade - entertainment program, moderated by Gunther Emmerlich , with regular appearances by cabaret artist and actor Wolfgang Stumph
- SpielSpaß - game show with Hans-Georg Ponesky
- Play me an old tune - TV show with international stars, moderated by Lutz Jahoda
- Springboard - with Hartmut Schulze-Gerlach
- Tele-Lotto 5 out of 35
- TEMPO - New Year's Eve entertainment show at the turn of the year
- Meeting with OF - first GDR talk show produced by Studio Dresden with host OF Weidling
- If so, then - moderated by Hans-Joachim Wolfram
- Make a wish - with Irmgard Düren , replaced at the beginning of the 1970s by the program Der Wunschbriefkasten
- Between breakfast and roast goose - show on Christmas Day, with Heinz Quermann and Margot Ebert
Sports broadcasts
- Football panorama
- Half time (always on wednesdays)
- Medicine by grades ( aerobic precursor)
- Sport current
- Sports in the evening
- Sport on Wednesday (2nd program)
- Sports on Sunday
- Sports arena
- Sports reporter
- Sport from the previous evening
Children's and youth programs
- 1-2-3 All sorts - with the quick draftsman Tom ( Thomas Schmitt ) and the hamster Pauline.
- Everything is trick - cartoons
- Brummkreisel - children's program with Achim and "Kunibert Männchen"
- Clown Ferdinand - pantomime stories
- The playhouse - puppet show series with Knollo, Defifé, Laribum and other characters
- Dingsbums - magazine for young pioneers
- Elf 99 - a contemporary youth program
- Ellentie - with Ellen Tiedtke (1983-1991)
- Flax and Crumbs - (1955-1970)
- Flicker hour - (1980 until today at the RBB), previously with Professor Flimmrich (1959–1980)
- Gix Gax - children's game show
- Peep box for little people
- Hey you! - On the stairs to the bet - quiz-like broadcast u. a. with Wolfgang Lippert
- Oops - with Wolfgang Hosfeld
- Circles and squares - more challenging quiz based on the tic-tac-toe principle
- Jan and Tini on their travels - two child-like dolls explore everyday life in the GDR
- Colorful - with the magician Peter Kersten, known as "Zauberpeter"
- Song carousel
- Join in, do it, do it better - children's sports program with Adi
- Man (n) ometer - with Peter Thomsen (director: Voss / Werner) from 1986 to 1990
- mobil - broadcast by the pioneer organization , moderated by Andreas Brückner , today moderator and editor at "MDR Aktuell" and "Umschau"
- Whistle - a preview for children's programs (1976 to 1990), which was broadcast on Saturday afternoon after the flicker hour and shows the highlights for the coming week in program excerpts. At the end there were written credits for programs from Monday to Saturday. The show was moderated u. a. by Frank Schenk
- schau - show in which two school classes competed against each other in different games
- Be there! - Youth magazine
- top fit - sports magazine for children
- Our Sandman - a children's program for “Good Night” (started November 22, 1959, today rbb is responsible for ARD)
- How about ...? - Hobbies and handicraft tips, moderated by the school director Vanadis Ulbricht and the later Tagesschau spokesman Jens Riewa
- Visiting Ms. Doll Doctor Pill
- A visit to Märchenland - at the beginning was still under the title Meister Nadelöhr told (1955 to 1975 with "Meister Nadelöhr" - played by Eckart Friedrichson , 1978 to 1989 with "Fabian" played by Klaus-Peter Pleßow ) with Schnatterinchen (since 1953) and Pittiplatsch (since 1962) , Mr. Fuchs and Mrs. Elster (since 1953); continued today by rbb for ARD
Series / series
The television of the GDR had a permanent cast of actors for its numerous film and series productions, many of the most popular GDR actors (e.g. Herbert Köfer , Walter Plathe , Günter Naumann , Helga Göring , Andreas Schmidt-Schaller , Helga Piur , Renate Geißler , Günter) Schubert , Jürgen Zartmann and many more) were members.
- Archive of Death - 5 scouts with special equipment are supposed to take possession of a secret archive in Nazi-occupied Poland
- Barefoot in bed - family series with Renate Blume- Reed, Jörg Panknin , Gudrun Okras , Manja Greese , Robert Huth , Franziska Peter, Werner Dissel , Karsten Speck and others. a.
- Willingness Dr. Federau - a rescue doctor is the protagonist (with Uta Schorn)
- Blue light - crime series
- The great adventure of Kaspar Schmeck
- The girl Störtebeker
- The invisible visor - Armin Mueller-Stahl as "Eastern Agent" in "Enemy Country"
- The lieutenant from Swan Kietz - here at the center: a precinct of the People's Police
- The prosecutor has the floor - crime series
- The Neumann family (continued under the title: Neumanns Stories ) - TV adaptation of the Neumann radio play series , ringing twice with Herbert Köfer , Irma Münch and Steffie Spira
- Fire station 09 - Berlin fire department at the turn - film series
- Flugstaffel Meinecke - seven-part television series on GDR television about agricultural pilots from Interflug (1989). With Jürgen Zartmann , Günter Schubert a . v. a.
- Fridolin - the main character is a male educator who finds it difficult to assert himself against the male world in the town
- Stories about garden fences and new things about garden fences - cheerful stories from an allotment garden
- Skyscraper Stories (1981)
- Jockei Monika with Miroslava Šafránková (1981)
- Johanna - a Berlin tram driver (played by Ute Lubosch) is the main character
- Neighborhood stories
- Märkische Chronik
- Herrmann man
- With heart and robe - Uta Schorn as a courageous judge
- Police call 110 - crime series
- Prairie Hunters in Mexico - Adventure series with Gojko Mitić , Koljo Dontschev a . a.
- Retirees never have time - Herbert Köfer and Helga Göring as a retired couple who keep the family going together
- Rita von Falkenhain
- Saxony's glory and Prussia's glory - internationally acclaimed co-production with the ČSSR
- Spreewaldfamilie - With Helga Göring and Rudolf Asmus .
- Spuk im Hochhaus - Children's TV series with Heinz Rennhack and again Katja Paryla , indirect continuation of the idea of Spuk unterm Ferris wheel
- Spook under the ferris wheel - series of children's television a. a. with the theater actress Katja Paryla , 3 characters from the ghost train of the Berlin culture park "come to life"
- Spook from outside - series of children's television with Hajo Müller , Madeleine Lierck , Wolf-Dieter Lingk , indirect continuation of the idea of Spuk unter Riesenrad / Spuk im Hochhaus
- Meeting point at the airport - about the crew of an airplane of the airline "Interflug" (including Walter Plathe)
- Our man is king - here in the center: a member of the city council
- Roads across the country
- Tooth for a tooth - the practices of Dr. Wittkugel - very popular episodes with a cheerful, ironic touch about the team at a dental practice (leading roles: Alfred Struwe and Helga Piur )
- At sea - everyday life on a ship of the GDR merchant marine (the MS Johann Gottlieb Fichte ), according to producer Wolfgang Rademann's own statement, it served as the inspiration for the ZDF series " Das Traumschiff "
Foreign series
The television of the GDR showed a number of series that were produced abroad, some of which were first broadcast in Germany - these are marked with an *. These included some series that came from so - called non - socialist countries . The synchronization took place largely through the television of the GDR .
Television series | Country of production | genre | First shipment | Repetition (s) |
---|---|---|---|---|
Adventure on the sea | New Zealand | Adventure series | May to July 84 | May to July 88 |
The Adventures of Dick Turpin * | United Kingdom | Adventure series | May 31, 1980 | 1981-1983 |
The adventures of Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn |
Canada / FRG |
Adventure series | October 1990 | |
Adolars fantastic adventures | Hungary | cartoon | January 22, 1977 | |
Agatha Christie's Poirot | United Kingdom | Crime series | March 27, 1990 | |
The American Duel * | Hungary | Adventure series | 1982 | 1985 |
Andrea and her friends * | Romania | Adventure series | June 1989 | |
The mysterious cities of gold * | France / Japan | Animated adventure series | 1988 | |
On axis | FRG | Adventure series | July 24, 1990 | |
The departure of the flying crowd * | Hungary | Adventure series | 1982 | 1985 |
BD intervenes * | Romania | Crime series | 1975 | 1988 |
Famous robber stories from around the world * | Czechoslovakia | Adventure series | January 7, 1988 | |
Curro Jiménez - The Andalusian Rebel * (also: Curro continues to fight and Curro does not give up ) |
Spain | Adventure series | 3rd November 1981 | 1981-1983 |
Daniel Boone * | United States | Western series | 1971 | |
Detective Sergeant Bulman, Scotland Yard * (also: Fahndung: Detective Sergeant Bulman, Scotland Yard ) |
United Kingdom | Crime series | 1983 | 1989 |
The woman behind the counter | Czechoslovakia | February 24, 1978 | ||
Dirty Dancing * | United States | Youth series | September 1, 1989 | |
Dusty | Australia | Adventure series | September 7, 1990 | |
Erotic at night (Série Rose) * | France | Erotic series | December 20, 1986 | |
Once upon a time there was a house (also: landlords and tenants ) |
Czechoslovakia | Drama series | February 11, 1977 | |
Expedition Adam '84 | Czechoslovakia | SciFi series | July 18, 1987 | 1990 |
torches in the storm | United States | Drama series | September 7, 1990 | 1991 |
Fame - the way to fame | United States | Dance series | June 1990 | |
Merian family | Austria | Family series | 1990 | |
Holidays with ghosts | Poland | Children's series | 1970 (b / w) | |
Search: Tokyo Airport Police * | Japan | Crime series | May 18, 1983 | 1985-1987 |
Truck driver * | France | Adventure series | June 25, 1973 | |
Paco the trucker * | Spain | Adventure series | September 27, 1980 | 1985 |
Floris - The Man with the Sword * | Netherlands | Adventure series | August 27, 1977 | |
The secret of the moor * | Belgium | Adventure series | May 1985 | 1989 |
The ghosts from Spirit Bay * | Canada | Adventure series | February 18, 1989 | |
A hamster in a nightgown | Czechoslovakia | Adventure series | December 25, 1989 | |
Hare and wolf | Soviet Union | cartoon | ||
The Baskerville Dog * | United Kingdom | Crime series | January 12, 1985 | |
Hunters Gold * | New Zealand | Adventure series | 1983 | 1988 |
Inspector Morse, Oxford Homicide Squad * | United Kingdom | Crime series | August 10, 1989 | |
Jim Bergerac investigates * | United Kingdom | Crime series | March 22, 1985 | 1986-1991 |
The jewel of the crown * | United Kingdom | Drama series | October 1986 | 1991 |
Captain Tenkes * (also: The captain of Tenkesberg ) |
Hungary | Adventure series | January 1965 | 1966-1989 |
Knight Rider | United States | Action series | 1991 | |
The hospital on the outskirts of the city * | Czechoslovakia | Hospital series | May 5th 1979 | 1986 |
The criminal cases of Major Zeman * (also: The 30 cases of Major Zeman ) |
Czechoslovakia | Crime series | March 9, 1976 | 1977-1982 |
The people of the Great saddle * | Czechoslovakia | Family series | April 1989 | |
Lolek and Bolek | Poland | cartoon | ||
The Lion of Flanders | Belgium | Adventure series | May 7, 1983 | |
The men of the Naumachos * | Italy | Adventure series | 1986 | 1989 |
Matt & Jenny | Canada | Adventure series | February 12, 1990 | |
Mazarin | France | Adventure series | March 30, 1983 | June 6, 1984 |
With full sails (also: To the end of the world ) |
Romania | Adventure series | 19th February 1980 | 1981-1985 |
Oh these tenants * | Denmark | Family series | January 6, 1975 | 1975-1986 |
Pipo can do it all |
Czechoslovakia / FRG |
Children's series | September 1989 | |
Private detective Anthonsen * | Denmark | Crime series | January 9, 1986 | 1988 |
The rebels from Liang Shan Po | Japan | Action series | 1991 | |
Richelieu | France | Adventure series | September 22, 1981 | 19th August 1984 |
The rivals of Sherlock Holmes | United Kingdom | Crime series | 5th January 1977 | 1978 |
Sandokan - The Tiger of Malaysia |
Italy / FRG / France |
Adventure series | July 1, 1981 | 1984 |
The treasure in space * |
Italy / FRG |
SciFi series | October 31, 1989 | |
The quick Gerdi | FRG | Family series | September 23, 1990 | |
The beautiful Arabella and the magician | Czechoslovakia | Children's series | July 30, 1983 | 1987 |
Black clouds * | Poland | Adventure series | 5th September 1975 | |
Sailor dreams * | Bulgaria | Adventure series | June 30, 1989 | |
Seconds decide * | Poland | Adventure series | February 13, 1969 | 1970-1986 |
She came from outer space * | Czechoslovakia | Children's series | 3rd July 1982 | |
The strong Lu * | People's Republic of China | Adventure series | January 23, 1987 | 1989 |
Stefek, the forty year old * (also: The inevitable experiences of Stefan Karwowski as a person and colleague ) |
Poland | Family series | August 31, 1977 | 1979-1989 |
Unusual stories by Roald Dahl (also: The incredible stories of Roald Dahl ) |
United Kingdom | Adventure series | 1990 | |
Our grandpa is the very best * | Czechoslovakia | Children's series | April 8, 1982 | 1989 |
The Invisible Man * | United Kingdom | SciFi series | May 3, 1986 | 1989 |
Four tank soldiers and a dog * | Poland | War series | March 1968 | |
Washington: behind closed doors | United States | Miniseries | May 2, 1980 | |
Like a wind-blown sheaf * | Hungary | Adventure series | March 19, 1985 | |
The return of Sherlock Holmes * (also: The adventures of Sherlock Holmes ) |
United Kingdom | Crime series | 1988 | |
William of Orange * | Netherlands / Belgium | Drama series | December 11, 1984 | 1989 |
The magic stone | Czechoslovakia | Children's series | June 14, 1986 | |
Zoo Adventure * | Australia | Animal series | August 1988 | 1990 |
The series Please continue to laugh in 1988 showed clips from the Ist ja crazy feature film series. The slapstick series with short films by Charlie Chaplin or Buster Keaton When the Cakes Fly or Goodnight with Charlie is also known as the Klamottenkiste .
School television
Programs from the following subjects and subject areas were produced for teaching in schools: chemistry, ESP (“ Introduction to Socialist Production ”), English ( English for you ), geography, history, local history, German, physics, civics and Russian .
Many programs can still be ordered through the German Broadcasting Archive , Frankfurt am Main and Potsdam-Babelsberg.
Financing and Promotion
Television was financed through license fees. In addition, it was heavily subsidized by the state. So were z. B. in the state budget of 1982 estimated 115.4 million GDR marks in revenue. In 1983 there were expenditures in the amount of 222 million GDR marks. The fee collection was carried out by the postal newspaper distributor .
In 1959 a test program "Notes for shopping" started on German television. It was the forerunner of the "Thousand Tele-Tips" that ran regularly on television from 1960 onwards. The programs were ad-free from 1975 . The reasons for this were certainly also the lack of competition between the products on offer.
From the turnaround phase , there was again advertising to finance the skyrocketing costs, which were now largely to be borne by the company. For this purpose, a contract was signed with the French advertising marketer IP (Information et Publicité) with a term until December 31, 1991.
technology
For the transmission standard, the GDR had deviated from the established in the rest of Eastern Europe OIRT norm D / K for the Western European CCIR - broadcast standard chosen B / G in order to remain compatible with West Germany. In contrast to the Federal Republic of Germany and in line with Eastern Europe, color television was introduced on October 3, 1969 in the SECAM standard developed by France . However, this did not change the basic compatibility, mutual reception at least in black and white was still possible. With the end of the program from December 14th to 15th, 1990, at the same time as the first program was switched off, the system switched to PAL . The Deutsche Bundespost assumed that devices that could receive both color standards were largely in use. Otherwise a decoder was necessary.
In 1983, television in the GDR was the first German television company to introduce the Betacam system developed by Sony for magnetic image recording on a trial basis , the successor systems of which ( Betacam SP and Digital Betacam ) are still used today by many large broadcasters. It gradually replaced the electromagnetic recording technology from Bosch . In the same year, GDR television used a steadicam for direct transmission in the German-speaking area for the first time .
Others
Herbert Köfer was in front of the camera for both the first and the last broadcast of the DFF. When it was first broadcast on December 21, 1952, he was a newscaster for Current Camera . The last broadcast was a New Year's Eve revue from Chemnitz , moderated by Ines Krüger and Walter Plathe , which was broadcast on New Year's Eve 1991. Köfer was invited there as a guest and sang together with Frank Schöbel the hit The last turns off the light, the shop is now closing .
GDR television celebrities
Surname | Function at the DFF | later activity |
---|---|---|
Andrea Ballschuh | Moderator children's program A bee for ... | Moderator, u. a. at MDR ( quickie ) and hr ( hello hessen ) |
Elke Bitterhof | Program spokesperson and presenter | Moderator MDR ( self-determined! ) And Antenne Brandenburg |
Bodo Boeck | Sports reporter | today at MDR |
Cathrin Böhme | Program spokesperson | Moderator of the Berliner Abendschau ( rbb ) |
Andreas Brückner | Moderator in the children's program ( mobile broadcast ) | Moderator of MDR aktuell (MDR) and Umschau |
Jan Carpentier | Political journalist at Elf 99 and in Studio Bonn | Journalist at the rbb |
Fanny Damaschke | Program spokesperson and presenter | |
Klaus Feldmann | News anchor of the current camera | News anchor and editor at regional broadcaster in Lausitz, now retired |
Bodo Freudl | Program announcement in the 2nd, moderator (RUND) and editor-in-chief for youth television | Activity at UFA ; was also on RTL breakfast television |
Angela Fritzsch | Moderator at Elf 99 | Presenter of zibb ( rbb ) |
Maria Gartz | Political journalist Studio Paris | today at Euronews Lyon |
Christiane Gerboth | Presenter current (follow-up broadcast of the "Current Camera") | News anchor at ProSieben |
Heike Götz | Regional news anchor | News anchor at ORB / rbb , today presenter at NDR |
Hellmuth Henneberg | Moderator | Moderator and journalist at rbb ( ozone and garden time ) |
Bernd Herrmann | Political Journalist (Studio Moscow) | Journalist at the rbb |
Dieter B. Herrmann | Aha moderator | Astronomer, science historian, former director of the Archenhold observatory in Berlin-Treptow and founding director of the Zeiss large planetarium in Berlin-Prenzlauer Berg, today President of the Leibniz Society of Sciences in Berlin |
Eckhard Herholz | Sports reporter and moderator "Sport aktuell" | switched to ZDF in 1990; today editor-in-chief of a private publishing company |
Victoria Herrmann | Journalist and presenter at Elf99 | Moderator at MDR |
Andrea Horn | Program announcer | Program spokesperson at RTL, then ZDF chief announcer, today a presenter at MDR |
Maybrit Illner | Travel magazine Azur , evening journal presenter and sports editor | Presenter at ZDF ( ZDF-Morgenmagazin , Maybrit Illner ) and publicist |
Hans-Dieter Jancker | AK correspondent in Dresden | Freelance MDR radio in Leipzig |
Ulrich Jansch | Sports reporter | Sports reporter at Eurosport |
Axel Kaspar | Journalist, filmmaker, presenter in the domestic politics magazine "Prisma" | from 1992 active for the MDR (magazines "WIR", "Exakt", "Fakt"), reports / documentaries |
Ulf Kalkreuth | Cultural journalist | Moderator at rbb |
Andrea Kiewel | Moderator of the regional program | Moderator at ZDF (including ZDF television garden ) |
Renate Krawielicki | news | Moderation at ORB and WDR ( family service time ) |
Hardy Kühnrich | Political journalist, later ARD correspondent in Warsaw | rbb journalist |
Petra Kusch-Lück | Program spokesperson | Moderator at ORB, MDR and rbb (musicians barn) |
Ines Kruger | Program spokesperson, entertainer, presenter ( Elf 99 ) | Moderator from Brisant (MDR) until 2005, now a therapist and no television |
Wolfgang Lippert | Moderator | Moderator u. a. at ZDF ( Wetten, dass ..? ) and MDR ( Where is Lippi? , boiler Colorful, those days was `) |
Anja Ludewig | AK correspondent for Berlin and Potsdam | rbb |
Christine Meister | news | rbb live reporter, presenter DW-TV |
Achim Mentzel | Moderator | Moderator at MDR ( The boat of good mood , Achim's hit parade ); † 2016 |
Gerald Meyer | Midday journal moderator | Moderator from Brandenburg aktuell and economy, work, saving - "WAS!" ( Rbb ) |
Carmen Nebel | Program spokesperson | Moderator at ZDF |
Bernd Niestroj | Political journalist in the Bonn studio | MDR journalist |
Heinz Florian Oertel | Sports reporter | ORB & MDR sports reporter, now retired |
Jens Riewa | news | Spokesman for the Tagesschau (NDR) |
Almut Rudel | Sports presenter | MDR - news presenter |
Matthias Schliesing | news | Journalist at MDR |
Michael Schmidt | News presenter | NDR journalist in Schwerin |
Susanne Schwab | Program announcer | Announcer at RTL, then at SFB |
Frank Stuckatz | Sports presenter | freelance MDR, rbb journalist |
Raiko Thal | Political Journalist ( AK zwo ) | Moderator of the evening show and zibb ( rbb ) |
Dirk Thiele | Sports reporter | Eurosport |
Peter Thomsen | Moderator ("Man (n) ometer") | active as a television actor in films and series |
Monika Unferferth | Program spokesperson | rbb , MDR, ZDF - journalist and presenter for fashion and clothing |
Angelika Unterlauf | Speaker of the current camera | Sat.1 journalist, wife of Erich Böhme , now retired |
OF Weidling | Moderator and conférencier as well as host of the talk show Treff mit OF | |
Doris Weikow | TV announcer in the 1st program | |
Beate Werner | Moderator Here in Saxony (later as Sachsenspiegel ) | MDR ( Out and about in Saxony ) |
Gert Wichmann | Political Journalist (Studio Warsaw) | MDR journalist |
Hans-Joachim Wolfram | Showmaster ( outsider leader ) | until 2011 continued as an MDR entertainment journalist the show outsider front-runner . |
See also
literature
- Rüdiger Steinmetz, Reinhold Viehoff (Hrsg.): German television east: A program history of the GDR television . 1st edition. Verlag für Berlin-Brandenburg, Berlin 2008, ISBN 978-3-86650-488-2 .
- Thomas Beutelschmidt: "Everything for the well-being of the people?!?" The GDR as screen reality before and after 1989 , 1999 ( abstract ).
- Matthias Steinle: From the enemy image to the external image. The mutual representation of FRG and GDR in the documentary . With a foreword by Marc Ferro. CLOSE UP series, vol. 18, UVK, Konstanz 2003, ISBN 978-3-89669-421-8 .
- Uwe Breitenborn: How did the bear laugh? Systematics, functionality and thematic segmentation of entertaining non-fictional program forms in German television until 1969 . Weißensee, Berlin 2003, ISBN 3-934479-99-5 ( publisher information ).
- Lars Brücher: West television and the revolutionary upheaval in the GDR in autumn 1989 , master's thesis, 2000 ( online version ).
- Oskar Fanta: Seeing - Guessing - Laughing? Quizzes and games on television in the GDR . Weißensee, Berlin 2006, ISBN 3-89998-079-4 .
- Peter Hoff: "Cold War on German Screens - The Ethereal War and the Plans to Build a Second TV Program in the GDR", in: Kulturation , 2/2003. ( Online version ).
- Woo-Seung Lee: Television in Divided Germany (1952–1989) . Verlag für Berlin-Brandenburg, Potsdam 2003, ISBN 3-935035-50-0 .
- Hans Müncheberg: A Bavarian blows out the little lights - Eastern television in the turning fever and unitary pull . In: Freitag 46/2004, Berlin, 2004 ( online version ).
- Hans Müncheberg: Blue miracle from Adlershof. German television broadcasting - what has been experienced and what has been collected. Das Neue Berlin, Berlin 2000, ISBN 3-360-00924-X .
- Christina Oberst-Hundt: From departure to settlement - October 3, 1990 was the end of a beginning for radio in the GDR , In: M - Menschenmachen Medien, 2000 ( online version ).
- Markus Hiegemann Rotenburg: What was left of German television broadcasting? Television and radio in the GDR 15 years after the fall of the Berlin Wall. Brilon, Sauerland Welle , broadcast on November 9th and 16th, 2004.
- Sabine Salhoff (arrangement): The documents of the GDR television. An inventory overview. DRA, Potsdam-Babelsberg 2001, ISBN 3-926072-98-9 .
- Erich Selbmann : DFF Adlershof. Paths across the TV country . Edition Ost, Berlin 1998, ISBN 3-932180-52-6 (Selbmann was editor-in-chief of the current camera from 1966 to 1978 ). - review
- Simone Tippach-Schneider: A thousand tele-tips. Advertising television in the GDR from 1959 to 1976 . Berlin 2004, ISBN 978-3896-02478-7 . - review
Web links
- Made in GDR - television. Engemann, Marburg, accessed on December 26, 2010 (private homepage with information on TV series on GDR television).
- A representation of the development of television from the "other" Germany - the GDR
- Online lexicon of GDR television films, television games and productions
Individual evidence
- ↑ operating history ROBOTRON Radeberg - televisions. Retrieved July 16, 2018 .
- ↑ Susanne Vollberg: “Repeater”, “Russian Program” or alternative mass program? For the conception and realization of the second program of the GDR television . In: Claudia Dittmar & Susanne Vollberg (eds.): The end of boredom? Program history of GDR television . Leipziger Universitätsverlag, 2003, ISBN 978-3-936522-59-4 , p. 169-170 .
- ↑ Jasper A. Friedrich: Between improvisation and international standard - production technology and process in the sports television area of the DFF . In: Jasper A. Friedrich, Lothar Mikos & Hans-Jörg Stiehler (eds.): Anpfiff. First analyzes of GDR sports television . Leipziger Universitätsverlag, 2004, ISBN 978-3-937209-01-2 .
- ^ Soviet Television Cameras. Museum of the Broadcast Television Camera, accessed August 20, 2010 .
- ^ Information and history of Fernseh GmbH. Retrieved November 12, 2009 .
- ^ The last minutes of the DFF broadcast on December 31, 1991 on YouTube .
- ↑ ORB and MDR start their programs , Chronik der ARD, January 1, 1992.
- ↑ MDR and ORB began broadcasting on January 1, 1992 on YouTube .
- ^ Early history of German television broadcasting 1952–1962
- ^ DFF: disperse personnel. Spiegel No. 52/1991, December 23, 1991
- ^ End of GDR television: From state television to broadcast federalism (PDF file). "Tele-Visionen" - Federal Agency for Civic Education, September 22, 2012 (date of the PDF file)
- ↑ Spelling see main title at fernsehserien.de (accessed on December 22, 2013), otherwise different spellings
- ↑ FF here ; No. 11; Program week from March 10th to 16th, 1986; Program preview for Thursday, March 13, 1986; 1. program; 11.00 a.m.; Sport from the previous evening; DNB 010364692 ; ISSN 0532-9140 ; OCLC 312029300 ; P. 24.
- ↑ Superillu: Herbert Köfer: »I forget names too. It's different with texts ... « , September 6, 2010.
- ↑ The announcers in the 70s and 80s - Susanne Schwab. Brief portraits at mdr.de, text version from April 6, 2018 (accessed October 5, 2018).
Coordinates: 52 ° 25 ′ 56 ″ N , 13 ° 32 ′ 24 ″ E