The North Berliner

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The North Berliner
Logo of the North Berliner
description Monthly magazine for Berlin and the surrounding area
publishing company The Nord-Berliner Zeitung und Zeitschriften Verlag GmbH
First edition 1949
Frequency of publication per month
Sold edition or print 32,000 copies
( Media-Daten Verlag )
Editor-in-chief Simone Bishop
ISSN (print)

Der Nord-Berliner was a regional monthly magazine (until 2016 a weekly newspaper) that appeared in Berlin and the northern region. In 1894 Wilhelm Möller founded the Möller Druck printing house, in which the North Berlin Daily Mail was published. After the end of the Second World War , Adolf Möller rebuilt his father's print shop and published the North Berlin Daily Mail from 1949 under the name Der Nord-Berliner .

On July 1, 2014, Nord-Berliner Zeitung und Zeitschriftenverlag GmbH was sold to Dirk Laudahn, Berlin-Hermsdorf . Laudahn was the sole managing partner. The editor-in-chief was given to the journalist Simone Bischof. In September 2014 the publisher employed 7 people. As a supplement to the monthly magazine, the publisher issued a magazine called “Spreepulver”. This magazine appeared four times a year and was distributed free of charge.

In October 2016, it was announced on the North Berliner's Facebook page that the magazine will be discontinued with immediate effect due to dwindling advertising income. The future is said to be "open".

Web links