The new sheet
The new sheet | |
---|---|
description | Women's magazine |
language | German |
publishing company | Bauer Media Group |
Headquarters | Hamburg |
First edition | 1950 |
Frequency of publication | weekly |
Sold edition | 291,459 copies |
( IVW 2/2020) | |
Widespread edition | 291,859 copies |
( IVW 2/2020) | |
Editor-in-chief | Petra Hansen-Blank |
Web link | dasneueblatt.de |
ISSN (print) | 0939-8538 |
The Neue Blatt is a weekly German women's magazine . It first appeared in 1950 in the publishing house Die Welt GmbH , which was bought by the Axel Springer publishing house in 1953 . Today it is published by the Hamburg-based Bauer Media Group . Like other titles in the rainbow press , Das Neue Blatt primarily reports on European noble houses and other celebrities . Other key topics are health, nutrition, fashion, travel and living. Petra Hansen-Blank has been the editor-in-chief since 2007.
readership
According to Bauer Verlag, the magazine's target group is the so-called “best agers”, ie women between the ages of 40 and 59. In quarter II / 09 ( IVW ), the sold circulation was 536,080 copies. In total, the paper reaches around 1.71 million readers. (Status: 2/2009.)
Processes around the new sheet
The Neue Blatt set a precedent in German media law in 1961 when it published a fictitious interview with Soraya Esfandiary Bakhtiari in its April 29 issue . The Hamburg Regional Court upheld a lawsuit by Princess Soraya and sentenced Das Neue Blatt to payment of damages in the amount of DM 15,000 for violation of her personal rights. An appeal process before the Federal Court of Justice confirmed the judgment, the Federal Constitutional Court rejected a constitutional complaint by Axel Springer Verlag ( BVerfGE 34, 269 ). Since then, the case has often been used in German case law when the fundamental right to freedom of expression and freedom of the press, as claimed by the media, came into conflict with the personal rights of celebrities.
The journal’s reporting was tried again in 1998 before the Federal Constitutional Court . The Neue Blatt reported on an allegedly imminent wedding of Caroline von Monaco and was sentenced to reprint a reply in the Caroline von Monaco judgment I.
In 2003, Queen Silvia of Sweden reached a comparison with the Neue Blatt that on January 28, 2004 counter-statements “No marriage crisis! No infidelity! No Intentions to Divorce! ”Were published.
Reprimand
In 2007 the German Press Council reprimanded the magazine for violating the press code . She had published advertisements that were not recognizable as such and thus, according to the press council, violated the requirement to separate editorial reporting and advertisements.
Web links
- Homepage Das Neue Blatt
- Sweden's royal family sues gossip papers ( memento of March 9, 2005 in the Internet Archive )
- In the shadow of the crown
Individual evidence
- ↑ Media analysis ( page no longer available , search in web archives ) Info: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.
- ↑ Communication from the German Press Council of November 29, 2007