HP / De Tijd
HP / De Tijd is a Dutch magazine. It was a weekly paper, since May 2012 it has been published monthly, the editorial office is in Amsterdam . HP / De Tijd has been published by the media group Audax since 1995. The circulation sold in the first quarter of 2008 was 30,273 copies.
history
The magazine was created in 1990 from a merger of De Tijd (since 1845) and Haagse Post (since 1914), both of which had to contend with steady circulation losses during the last ten years of their independence. Even after the merger, the rescheduled edition could not be kept. Since the turn of the millennium, however, in contrast to the (supra) regional daily newspapers, which mostly suffered considerable losses in circulation, the paper has not experienced any further loss of importance, but has to compete with the three other political magazines Elsevier , De Groene Amsterdammer and Vrij Nederland .
content
HP / De Tijd deals mostly with politics and culture. In addition to the treatment of current topics in the form of a weekly overview, interviews , portraits , essays , comments, reports and caricatures can be found in the magazine. The focus is heavily on the domestic market, even if the magazine has its own page Buitenlandse zaken ("Foreign"), on which a single special topic is dealt with, and in its weekly overview some events abroad are briefly reproduced in a few sentences. There are also brief reviews of books, CDs and DVDs . a special section for food & drink and a crossword puzzle.
Alignment
The assessment of the political orientation of HP / De Tijd varies ; it has been viewed by various columnists in other newspapers and magazines in recent years as right-wing ( Jan Blokker , nrc.next ) or at least outside of a mainstream described as left-wing within the Dutch media landscape ( Paul Lieben , Elsevier ) lying down.
Internet
With the launch of the online presence in 2004, HP / De Tijd was the last political weekly magazine in the Netherlands to start. The website is limited to articles. On newsletter , web feeds , podcasts and multimedia content are omitted.
Known former or current editors / employees
- Guikje Roethof . She worked as a parliamentary editor for the magazine until 1994, when she was dismissed because her candidacy for the Democrats 66 party in the parliamentary elections of that year was incompatible with neutral reporting. Roethof then made it into the Second Chamber of the States General and was a member of parliament until 1998.
- Gregorius Nekschot , cartoonist
Previous editors-in-chief
Ad 's-Gravesande | 1990-1991 |
Gerard Driehuis | 1991-1995 |
Bert Vuijsje | 1996-2000 |
Henk Steenhuis | 2000-2008 |
Jan Dijkgraaf | 2009-2010 |
Frank Poorthuis | 2011–2012 |
Daan Dijksman, Boudewijn Geels | 2013- |
Edition development
Individual evidence
- ↑ Jan van der Plasse: Kroniek van de Niederlande dagblad- en opiniepers , p. 279 (Dutch)
- ↑ a b Het Online Instituut (Dutch / partly English)
- ↑ a b Circulation numbers according to politiekcompendium.nl ( Memento of the original from March 8, 2014 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. (Dutch)
- ↑ nrc.nl: "Tussen het hockeyveld en driehoogachter in Rotterdam" by Jan Blokker , November 21, 2007 (Dutch)
- ↑ elsevier.nl: “Ook rechtsse opinies op tv, alstublieft!” By Paul Lieben, April 28, 2007 ( memento of the original from May 13, 2008 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. (Dutch)
- ↑ trouw.nl: "Een vracht Gegevens, maar van niks voldoende", April 30, 1994 (Dutch)
- ↑ parlement.com: Portrait of Guikje Roethof (Dutch)
Web links
- HP / De Tijd website (Dutch)