ARD (broadcaster)
ARD (German pronunciation: [ˌʔaː.ʔɛɐ̯.ˈdeː] (
Type | Broadcast radio, television and online |
---|---|
Country | Germany |
Availability | National International |
Motto | Wir sind deins. We are yours. |
Launch date | 5 June 1950 |
Official website | www.ard.de |
The ARD has a budget of €6.9 billion[1] and 22,612 employees.[2] The budget comes primarily from a licence fee which every household, company and public institution are required by law to pay. For an ordinary household the fee is currently €17.50 per month. Households living on welfare do not have to pay the fee. The fees are not collected directly by the ARD, but by the Beitragsservice (formerly known as Gebühreneinzugszentrale GEZ), a common organisation of the ARD member broadcasters, the second public TV broadcaster ZDF, and Deutschlandradio.
ARD maintains and operates a national television network, called Das Erste ("The First") to differentiate it from ZDF, a.k.a. "das Zweite" ("The Second"), which started 1963, as a separate public TV-broadcaster. The ARD network began broadcasting on 31 October 1954 under the name of Deutsches Fernsehen ("German Television"), becoming Erstes Deutsches Fernsehen ("First German Television") with a corporate redesign in 1984; it adopted its current short name (Das Erste) in 1994. ARD's programmes are aired over its own terrestrial television network, as well as on pay television.
ARD also produces two free-to-air channels (one and Tagesschau24) and participates in the production of Phoenix (current events, news and documentaries), KiKa (kids-oriented), 3sat (cultural-oriented), arte (Franco-German cultural programming), and Funk (teenage-oriented, online only).
ARD's programming is produced by its regional members (see also Institutions and member organizations) (Bayerischer Rundfunk (BR), Hessischer Rundfunk (HR), Mitteldeutscher Rundfunk (MDR), Norddeutscher Rundfunk (NDR), Radio Bremen, Rundfunk Berlin–Brandenburg (RBB), Saarländischer Rundfunk (SR), Südwestrundfunk (SWR) and Westdeutscher Rundfunk (WDR)), which operate 54 regional and local radio stations and seven regional TV networks, some of which have opt outs at during the day. Deutsche Welle, Germany's international broadcaster, is also a member of ARD.
History
Name
- German: "Arbeitsgemeinschaft – der öffentlich-rechtlichen Rundfunkanstalten – der Bundesrepublik Deutschland"
- 'Consortium' ("Working group") – of the public-law broadcasting institutions‡ – of the Federal Republic of Germany'
‡public-law broadcasting institutions means broadcasters which are not privately owned (German: Privatradio and Privatfernsehen) and are not governmental radio or TV. ARD is not 'owned by' anybody, particularly not by "Germany" (meaning its government/federal state). ARD-members like BR (Bayerischer Rundfunk) are not owned by their Land (state and its government, here Bavaria), either. With the Rundfunkfreiheit (freedom of broadcasting), they have an independent position (within a legal framework).
1940s and 1950s
The winning Allies of World War II determined that German radio after World War II would not broadcast the same propaganda as the pre-war Reichs-Rundfunk-Gesellschaft ("Reich Broadcasting Company"). A federal structure, the renunciation of state influence and the avoidance of economic dependence were to be the key of the radio and TV institutions under public law (öffentlich-rechtliche Rundfunk- und Fernsehanstalten, public radio and television organisations). The legal form of the new entity was Anstalt des öffentlichen Rechts ("Institution under Public Law"), a non-government and nonprofit organisation with its own administration under the control of two commissions, the Rundfunkrat (Broadcasting Council, responsible for the programmed content) and the Verwaltungsrat (Administration Council, responsible for management and infrastructure), in which different stakeholders from German public life were represented.
ARD's founding members were Nordwestdeutscher Rundfunk (NWDR), the station for the former British zone, Südwestfunk (SWF), the station in the French zone, and four stations located in the former American sector— Bayerischer Rundfunk (BR), Süddeutscher Rundfunk (SDR), Hessischer Rundfunk (HR), and Radio Bremen (RB). The new entity was financed by an obligatory fee which every German household with at least one radio receiver paid. Each station received the money collected in its state. Larger ARD members subsidised smaller ones up to a certain extent.
In 1947, American military governor Lucius D. Clay declared diversity of public opinion as the main aim of post-war media policy. Individuals aligned with the post-war Allied forces in their respective sectors of Germany had a local influence on local regional broadcasters. NDR cites the influence of Hugh Greene on the early years of their organisation.
After the creation of individual broadcasting agencies for most German federal states these principles were further consolidated by Länder broadcasting laws, decisions of the Federal Constitutional Court (Bundesverfassungsgericht) and state treaties between the Länder. ARD members are thus (at least nominally) free of government influence and rely for only a small part of their income on advertising (1995: ten percent). They are financed mainly from licence fees from radio and TV owners, which are set through a complex political process. The mandated aim of the ARD corporations is not only to inform and to entertain, but also to encourage the integration of various parts of society and allow minorities a say in programming.
In the 1950s the ARD radio services became the major factor of the mass media system in West Germany. As early as 1952 the ARD radio stations had ten million listeners. However, the radio stations operated on a regional level, and it was only the development of a television umbrella that helped the ARD to establish itself nationwide. The broadcasting of a countrywide TV broadcast service was the goal of the ARD from the outset and the go-ahead for this was given at the end of 1952. The same year ARD was admitted as a full active member of the European Broadcasting Union and the "German sound archive", now German Broadcasting Archive (DRA, Deutsches Rundfunkarchiv), was established as a joint facility of the ARD.
In 1955 the founding member NWDR ("Nordwestdeutscher Rundfunk", English: "North-West German Broadcasting") split into today's NDR and WDR. The year before (1954) the smaller SFB was split off. The first daily news feature, the Tagesschau, went on the air from Hamburg in 1952. The famous 8:00 pm chime and announcement "Hier ist das Erste Deutsche Fernsehen mit der Tagesschau" ("This is the first German television channel with the Tagesschau") remains an ARD hallmark today. The broadcast attracts an average of 8 million viewers.
1960s–1980s
After starting with a schedule of a mere two hours per-night, television became more widespread in Germany in the 1960s. Color broadcasts were introduced in 1967. Without competition from private broadcasters (other than the francophone Europe 1 and the multilingual RTL (Radio-Television Luxembourg) radio programs), the ARD stations made considerable progress in becoming modern and respected broadcasters. ZDF (Zweites Deutsches Fernsehen, Second German Television), a second public television broadcaster with centralized national organization structure, began its programming in 1963, but ARD would encounter no private competition in Germany until 1984. The ARD stations have also been a significant force in German politics; such investigative news magazines as Monitor and Panorama still reach millions of viewers every week. The environmental movement increased in popularity during the 1980s largely as a result of the disclosures made by ARD.
When private/commercial German-language broadcasters were admitted in Germany by federal law in the mid-1980s, ARD television made subtle changes, adapting somewhat by producing programs oriented to a larger audience for their national networks and shifting many cultural and news programs to the regional networks and to newly created niche channels.
Informational television programs and the orientation of "Deutschlandfunk" (Germany's national public radio station, associated with, but not a member of the ARD) programs towards the GDR were of importance to the eventual collapse of the GDR. Established in 1974, the ARD bureau in East Berlin made ARD television the most important source of information for GDR citizens, eighty percent of whom could watch what they referred to as "Westfernsehen". Notwithstanding obstruction on the part of GDR authorities and the repeated expulsion of their correspondents, the ARD-Tagesschau and Deutschlandfunk transmitted reports about the Leipzig Monday Demonstrations (which started on 4 September 1989) as early as September 1989.
1990s
After unification and the closure of the GDR television service, two new regional broadcasters were established in the East, becoming ARD members in 1992. These were originally the Mitteldeutscher Rundfunk (MDR, English: "Central German Broadcasting"), and Ostdeutscher Rundfunk Brandenburg (ORB, English: "East German Broadcasting Brandenburg"). The existing NDR service expanded into the north-east, where it also covered Mecklenburg-Vorpommern. The ORB service has since merged with the former Sender Freies Berlin (SFB, English "Radio Free Berlin") to become Rundfunk Berlin-Brandenburg (RBB, English: "Berlin-Brandenburg Broadcasting") in 2003.
Another merger took place between two member organisations of the ARD in 1998. The former Süddeutscher Rundfunk (SDR, English: "Southern German Broadcasting") and Südwestfunk (SWF, English: "Southwestcast") became Südwestrundfunk (SWR, English: "Southwest Broadcasting") on 1 October 1998.
Programming
Radio
Today, ARD member stations usually produce their own radio programming. Some ARD member stations usually collaborate for common radio services (an example being Nordwestradio, a culture-oriented radio station co-produced by Radio Bremen and NDR). Most ARD stations, however, will have at least a news-oriented radio station, a classical-music station, a youth-oriented station, and a cultural station. At night some stations will relay common night programming produced on a rota system by the ARD stations themselves. There are four common night programming services: Nachtexpress/Radiowecker (light music), Nachtkonzert (classical music), Infonacht (all news) and Popnacht (pop music). Most services are on the FM broadcast band, though some services are also available on DAB.
A similar network intended for national coverage is called Deutschlandradio, however Deutschlandradio is not an ARD member – instead Deutschlandradio is controlled by both ARD and ZDF. Deutschlandradio provides two terrestrial radio services: Deutschlandfunk (DLF), a news-oriented service, and Deutschlandfunk Kultur, a culture-oriented service. It also provides a science-orientated internet channel: Deutschlandfunk Nova.
ARD's best known radio station outside Germany is Deutsche Welle, which broadcasts its radio services around the world in many languages, mostly on analogue shortwave radio, online and FM partner stations. Deutsche Welle has no FM distribution in Germany.
"Archivradio"[3] is an ARD internet radio station which streams raw audio material from German sound archives, mainly the ARD radio archives and the DRA. The program is accompanied by a web portal run by the ARD-member SWR, with background information of the original sounds aired.
Television
The main television channels of the ARD are the nationwide Das Erste and seven regional channels operated by the different regional broadcasting institutions. These channels were available on the analogue terrestrial transmitters until the shutdown of the analogue transmitters started in 2003. Das Erste and the third programmes, like the radio stations, are principally funded by licence fees, with a very limited amount of on-air advertising.
Das Erste broadcasts nationwide 24 hours a day, although the schedule does include four and a half hours of joint programming with ZDF each weekday, in the form of the news programmes Morgenmagazin (on air 5.30–9.00) and Mittagsmagazin (13.00–14.00), which the two organizations take weekly turns to produce. Audience share (March 2008):12.5%, from 14–49 years 6.9%.
The regional members of ARD all, jointly (NDR/rb and SWR/SR) or separately, operate their own regional channels, known collectively as die Dritten ("the Third Programmes") – before recent rebranding, most of these stations had names like West 3 and Hessen 3. The schedules of these regional channels also include sub-regional opt-outs at certain times, in particular for local news.
- BR Fernsehen from Bayerischer Rundfunk (sub-regional opt-outs: Altbayern und Schwaben (South), Franken (North))
- hr-fernsehen from Hessischer Rundfunk
- MDR Fernsehen from Mitteldeutscher Rundfunk (opt-outs: state programmes for Saxony, Sachsen-Anhalt, Thuringia)
- NDR Fernsehen from Norddeutscher Rundfunk (opt-outs: state programmes for Lower Saxony, Schleswig-Holstein, Hamburg, Mecklenburg-Vorpommern and rb.tv from Radio Bremen)
- RBB Fernsehen from Rundfunk Berlin-Brandenburg (opt-outs: separate state programmes)
- SWR Fernsehen from Südwestrundfunk – in collaboration with SR Fernsehen (opt-outs: state programmes for Baden-Württemberg, Rhineland-Palatinate and SR Fernsehen from Saarländischer Rundfunk)
- WDR Fernsehen from Westdeutscher Rundfunk. (11 local opt-outs within North Rhine-Westphalia)
ARD has two additional channels as part of their ARD Digital package:
- Tagesschau24 - A television news channel
- One - An enterntainment television channel
ARD is also involved in several joint venture channels:
- 3sat with ZDF, ORF and SRG: a cultural channel
- KI.KA with ZDF: a children's channel
- Arte with ZDF and France Télévisions: a Franco-German cultural channel
- Phoenix with ZDF: a news and documentary channel, focussed on showing press conferences and political debates in the German parliament live, in addition to historical and political features.
The international broadcaster Deutsche Welle also produces television services; however these services are mostly available via satellite.
Podcasts
The Tagesschau, produced by the ARD on a nightly basis, is available on the ARD website as a podcast (available as audio-only or as audio and video). Other audio programs from the ARD's members (e.g., BR, MDR) and Deutsche Welle are available as podcasts, through their respective websites.
Institutions and member organizations
Regional broadcaster (translation) | Abbreviation | Main office location(s) | Income 2004 (Millions of Euro) | Year of establishment | Region of coverage |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Bayerischer Rundfunk (Bavarian Broadcasting) | BR | Munich | 806 | 1949 | Bavaria |
Deutsche Welle ("German Wave") | DW | Bonn | Financed through taxes | 1953 | International |
Hessischer Rundfunk (Hessian Broadcasting) | HR | Frankfurt | 383 | 1948 | Hesse |
Mitteldeutscher Rundfunk (Central German Broadcasting) | MDR | Leipzig | 561 | 1991 | Free State of Saxony, Saxony-Anhalt, Thuringia |
Norddeutscher Rundfunk (North German Broadcasting) | NDR | Hamburg | 892 | 1956 | Hamburg, Lower Saxony and Schleswig-Holstein since 1955; Mecklenburg-Vorpommern since 1991. |
Radio Bremen | RB | Bremen | 41 | 1945 | Free Hanseatic City of Bremen |
Rundfunk Berlin-Brandenburg (Berlin-Brandenburg Broadcasting) | RBB | Berlin, Potsdam | 340 | 2003 | Berlin, Brandenburg |
Saarländischer Rundfunk (Saarland Broadcasting) | SR | Saarbrücken | 64 | 1957 | Saarland |
Südwestrundfunk (Southwest Broadcasting) | SWR | Stuttgart, Mainz, Baden-Baden | 922 | 1998 | Baden-Württemberg, Rhineland-Palatinate |
Westdeutscher Rundfunk (West German Broadcasting) | WDR | Cologne | 1067 | 1956 | North Rhine-Westphalia |
ARD has 32 bureaux across the world, making it one of the world's largest news bureau networks worldwide.[4][5]
ARD operates several other companies and institutions, sometimes jointly with ZDF:Degeto Film, a television rights trader and production company; the German Broadcasting Archive (DRA – Deutsches Rundfunkarchiv); the Institute for Broadcasting Technology (IRT – Institut für Rundfunktechnik), responsible for research and development; the Fee Collection Service (Beitragsservice), and others.
ARD is a supporter of the Hybrid Broadcast Broadband TV (HbbTV) initiative that is promoting and establishing an open European standard for hybrid set-top boxes for the reception of broadcast TV and broadband multimedia applications with a single user interface.
Chairs of the ARD
Term Begin |
Term End |
Name | Broadcaster |
---|---|---|---|
5 August 1950 | 2 February 1951 | Rudolf von Scholtz | BR |
3 February 1951 | 2 August 1951 | Eberhard Beckmann | HR |
3 August 1951 | 3 February 1952 | Adolf Grimme | NWDR |
4 February 1952 | 30 September 1952 | Walter Geerdes | RB |
1 October 1952 | 31 March 1953 | Fritz Eberhard | SDR |
1 April 1953 | 30 September 1953 | Friedrich Bischoff | SWF |
1 October 1953 | 30 September 1954 | Rudolf von Scholtz | BR |
1 October 1954 | 31 December 1955 | Eberhard Beckmann | HR |
1 January 1956 | 31 December 1956 | Fritz Eberhard | SDR |
1 January 1957 | 31 December 1957 | Walter Hilpert | NDR |
1 January 1958 | 31 December 1958 | Franz Stadelmayer | BR |
1 January 1959 | 31 December 1960 | Friedrich Bischoff | SWF |
1 January 1961 | 31 December 1962 | Hans Bausch | SDR |
1 January 1963 | 31 December 1964 | Klaus von Bismarck | WDR |
1 January 1965 | 31 December 1966 | Werner Hess | HR |
1 January 1967 | 31 December 1969 | Christian Wallenreiter | BR |
1 January 1970 | 31 December 1971 | Gerhard Schröder | NDR |
1 January 1972 | 31 December 1973 | Helmut Hammerschmidt | SWF |
1 January 1974 | 31 December 1975 | Hans Bausch | SDR |
1 January 1976 | 31 December 1977 | Werner Hess | HR |
1 January 1978 | 31 December 1979 | Friedrich-Wilhelm von Sell | WDR |
1 January 1980 | 31 December 1983 | Reinhold Vöth | BR |
1 January 1984 | 31 December 1985 | Friedrich Wilhelm Räuker | NDR |
1 January 1986 | 31 December 1987 | Willibald Hilf | SWF |
1 January 1988 | 31 December 1988 | Hans Bausch | SDR |
1 January 1989 | 31 December 1990 | Hartwig Kelm | HR |
1 January 1991 | 31 December 1992 | Friedrich Nowottny | WDR |
1 January 1993 | 31 December 1994 | Jobst Plog | NDR |
1 January 1995 | 31 December 1996 | Albert Scharf | BR |
1 January 1997 | 31 December 1998 | Udo Reiter | MDR |
1 January 1999 | 31 December 2000 | Peter Voß | SWR |
1 January 2001 | 31 December 2002 | Fritz Pleitgen | WDR |
1 January 2003 | 31 December 2004 | Jobst Plog | NDR |
1 January 2005 | 31 December 2006 | Thomas Gruber | BR |
1 January 2007 | 31 December 2008 | Fritz Raff | SR |
1 January 2009 | 31 December 2010 | Peter Boudgoust | SWR |
1 January 2011 | 31 December 2012 | Monika Piel | WDR |
1 January 2013 | 31 December 2015 | Lutz Marmor | NDR |
1 January 2016 | 31 December 2017 | Karola Wille | MDR |
1 January 2018 | 31 December 2019 | Ulrich Wilhelm | BR |
1 January 2020 | 31 December 2021 | Tom Buhrow | WDR |
Criticism
"State television" charge
After the ARD withdrew material critical of the Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, the magazine Der Spiegel compared this behaviour to the Politburo of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union. "The only thing that worries the delegates to the supervisory bodies was seen as the question whether the group they represent is treated with respect."[6] To get rid of the "annoying image of state radio", Der Spiegel recommends it would certainly be helpful to keep more distance from the government: "...it's really hard to find people among those responsible for political reporting who do not find Angela Merkel quite wonderful and would like to share that with the audience every day."[7]
Framing Manual
Claudia Schwartz from the Neue Zürcher Zeitung reported in February 2019 the ARD wanted to liven up the audience with morality. An internal manual from the "Berkeley International Framing Institute" was used in order to make ARD viewers consider their fees less as a compulsory contribution than as a kind of donation to a good cause. Claudia Schwartz commented: "Self-congratulation in the best traditition of state radio one is inclined to write - if this word would not already have been prohibited for some time."[8]
See also
- Television in Germany
- Zweites Deutsches Fernsehen (Second German TV channel)
- List of German-language television channels
References
- ARD: ARD Jahrbuch 2005. Hans-Bredow-Institut, 2005 ISBN 3-8329-1730-6 (Online Excerpts, in German)
- Notes
- "ARD Finanzbericht" (PDF). ARD. 2014. Retrieved 2017-01-11.
- "ARD Mitarbeiter". ARD. 2015. Retrieved 2017-01-11.
- "Startseite - Archivradio - Wissen - SWR2". swr.online. Retrieved 2018-03-14.
- ARD.de. "Auslandsstudios der ARD". ard.de. Retrieved 2018-03-14.
- "Auslandsstudios - Organisation - Unternehmen". swr.de. Retrieved 2018-03-14.
- http://www.spiegel.de/politik/deutschland/zdf-ein-regierungssender-kontrolliertes-fernsehen-kolumne-a-1086658.html. Missing or empty
|title=
(help) - Fleischhauer, Jan (2019-02-14). "Manipulation: Schöner sprechen mit der ARD". Spiegel Online. Retrieved 2019-02-18.
- Schwartz, Claudia. "Die ARD will mit Framing das Publikum einseifen". Neue Zürcher Zeitung (in German). Retrieved 2019-02-18.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to ARD. |
- Official website (in German)
- Official information about ARD in English (PDF document)
- Live ARD Radio
- ARD Radio Guide