Thomas Friemel

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Thomas Friemel (born October 6, 1967 in Rietberg ) is a German journalist .

Friemel made his Abitur at the Gymnasium Nepomucenum Rietberg . He did his civil service between 1987 and 1989 in Paderborn, where he decided to become a development worker while doing civil service . As a result, he worked in Brazilian favelas for nine months . After returning to Germany, he decided to study political science in Marburg and Berlin, which he completed with a diploma .

Friemel did an internship at the newspaper Norddeutsche Latest Nachrichten and at the press and information office of the city of Karlsruhe, and he also did a one-year internship at the Berliner Zeitung . He worked as a political editor for the magazine Max and as chief reporter for the Kölnische Rundschau and the Berliner Kurier . In the Hamburger Morgenpost and the men's magazine Matador Friemel was deputy editor in chief , the men's magazine player editor.

Due to his dissatisfaction with the magazine Player, Friemel quit his job. By visiting the Congress Visons Summit in 2008 Friemel was on the subject of social business carefully. He came up with the idea of ​​founding a specialist journal on the subject. After the beginning of 2009 the GENISIS Institute for Social Business and Impact Strategies , which is responsible for the Congress, presented his proposal was a shift to general-interest magazine . On March 18, 2010, the first issue of the business magazine enormous appeared , which deals with social business, social entrepreneurship and corporate social responsibility . Friemel was the editor-in-chief of this magazine and is now the publisher's editor-in-chief.

Thomas Friemel is married and has two children.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b c kress.de: Thomas Friemel , accessed on April 21, 2012
  2. a b enormous: editorial staff , accessed on April 21, 2012
  3. a b wuv.de: Thomas Friemel: Enorme Entwicklung , from January 5, 2010, accessed on April 21, 2012
  4. ^ Roche & Böhmermann, episode of March 18, 2012, minute 36: 50-37: 00
  5. Peter Münder: Grünes Geld ( Memento from July 30, 2012 in the web archive archive.today ), Frankfurter Rundschau , from April 6, 2011, accessed on April 21, 2012
  6. enormous website: [1] , from March 18, 2015, accessed on March 18, 2015
  7. ^ Roche & Böhmermann, episode of March 18, 2012, minute 35