ML Mona Lisa

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Television broadcast
Original title ML Mona Lisa
Country of production Germany
original language German
Year (s) 1988-2017
Production
company
ZDF
length 30 or 35 minutes
Broadcasting
cycle
weekly
genre magazine
First broadcast April 17, 1988 on ZDF

ML Mona Lisa was a society magazine broadcast on ZDF from April 1988 to July 2017 ; Until May 2011 an information program mainly for women, from then on male viewers should also be increasingly addressed. The editorial office was in Munich. According to ZDF, the cost was estimated at around 57,000 euros per issue.

history

Since 1988, the moderated individual contributions of the original women’s program have dealt with topics of particular interest to women for many years and ran on Sundays, most recently at 6 p.m. The broadcast was from Studio 3 in Unterföhring . After the program was initially criticized for "soft" topics such as cosmetics, it became more political and dealt, among other things, with the controversy surrounding Paragraph 218 , child pornography and rape against the background of the war in Yugoslavia . Towards the end, the emphasis of ML Mona Lisa was on portraying personal life plans and fates.

From May 7, 2011 until the last edition, male viewers were to be increasingly addressed with the common motto “Women, men and more”. The broadcast date was postponed to 6 p.m. on Saturdays and the new presenter Barbara Hahlweg joined Susanne Kronzucker . The program has been broadcast since May 7, 2011 from the "Sky Lounge" at Munich Ostbahnhof . The broadcasts were assigned to fixed categories such as “Topic of the week”, “Behind the limelight” or “That's good”. From February 2012 Alexander Mazza was also the moderator.

In February 2017, ZDF announced that the magazine would be discontinued in summer 2017. The last broadcast was on July 15, 2017. In the last two broadcasts, the editors said goodbye with a look back at almost 30 years of ML.

Editorial managers

Moderators

Former

The overlapping of the years results from the fact that two presenters alternately presented the program.

Awards

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b c Wilfried Geldner: Cocktail for women in: Hamburger Abendblatt from May 11, 2002
  2. News programs and magazines - profiles and costs. (No longer available online.) ZDF , August 28, 2014, archived from the original on December 3, 2016 ; accessed on August 30, 2014 . 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. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.zdf.de
  3. ^ Cordula Dieckmann, dpa: Social policy instead of women stuff: 20 years of "ML Mona Lisa" ntv.de from April 19, 2008
  4. ^ Inge Treichel: ZDF: "Mona Lisa" ends the era as a purely women's magazine in; Die Welt from May 4th 2011
  5. in: Der Tagesspiegel from May 6, 2011
  6. http://www.tz-online.de/aktuelles/fernsehen/mazza-macht-mona-lisa-ich-moderner-mann-1596512.html
  7. "Mona Lisa" is to be discontinued. In: Spiegel online. February 20, 2017. Retrieved February 20, 2017 .
  8. a b c Sybille Bassler takes over Mona Lisa editing on kress.de from February 22, 2008
  9. ^ ZDF: Quota women in: DER SPIEGEL 2/2000 from January 10, 2000
  10. A new face on Kress.de from May 18, 1999
  11. MODERATORS: Faster, more up-to-date in: Der Spiegel 36/2000 of September 4, 2000
  12. Update for the women's magazine: "ML Mona Lisa" also targets men in: Schwäbisches Tagblatt dated May 7, 2011
  13. Karen Webb Mona Lisa on kress.de from August 26, 2003
  14. a b c Susanne Kronzucker switches to ZDF A station attracts in: Süddeutsche Zeitung from December 17, 2007
  15. ^ Rebirth of "ML Mona Lisa": Gender redefinition at 23 on taz.de on May 6, 2011