The television dictionary

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The television lexicon is a special lexicon on television programs and series published by Wilhelm Goldmann Verlag in November 2005 .

The full title of the reference work written by the authors Michael Reufsteck and Stefan Niggemeier is:

The television lexicon - all over 7000 programs from Ally McBeal to the ZDF hit parade .

In fact, the book begins with the DFF Saturday evening show A, B or C and ends with the RTL music show Die Zwölf , or the RTL lunch journal 12.30 ( previous broadcast of item 12 ).

The lexicon with a foreword by Bastian Pastewka has 1414 pages. Together with registers, picture credits, glossary and vita, there are 1512 pages with 450 color images. It contains information on more than 7000 programs that have been broadcast on German television since its start in 1952 .

reception

  • Stefan Otto from Kino-Zeit.de praises the television lexicon as a “splendid piece” and “to this extent previously unrivaled reference work”, “in which you can quickly get stuck and lose yourself”.
  • The Frankfurter Allgemeine Sonntagszeitung states that it provides “entertaining information on more than 7,000 programs”.
  • In summary, Axel Schock from the Berliner Zeitung finds that there are many interesting passages in the book, "... which make leafing through, browsing and (re) discovering past television joys and sorrows a pleasure."

Edition

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. The book. In: Fernsehlexikon.de. Retrieved May 29, 2019 .
  2. From the editorial office. In: Frankfurter Allgemeine Sonntagszeitung . No. 43, October 30, 2005, p. 32 , accessed on May 29, 2019 .
  3. Axel Schock: From Ally McBeal to the ZDF hit parade: “Das Fernsehlexikon” brings together more than 7,000 TV programs - it starts with Herricht and Preil. In: berliner-zeitung.de . November 11, 2005, accessed May 29, 2019 .