heute-show

The heute-show is a German late-night satirical television program airing every Friday evening on public broadcasting channel ZDF. A conceptual adaptation of The Daily Show with Trevor Noah, it is presented by German comedian and journalist Oliver Welke. Heute show presents the weekly news with funny or sarcastic and cynical comments, especially focusing on issues that are subject of the latest political discussions in Germany. Welke argues that he might help to make people interested in politics and might help to point out "what goes the wrong way" in parliamentary debates, in ministries, in institutions, and in parties. Sometimes, he simply mocks "people who deserve it" in his show.[1]

heute-show
GenreComedy, news satire
Presented byOliver Welke
Opening theme"Breakfast Briefing" by Terry Devine-Kings
Country of originGermany
No. of episodes336 (as of Spring 2020)
Production
Executive producer(s)David Flasch (2009–2010)
Georg Hirschberg
Gregor Salmingkeit
Production location(s)Cologne
Running time30-35 minutes
Release
Original networkZDF
Picture format720p (16:9 HDTV)
Original release26 May 2009 (2009-05-26) 
present
External links
Website

History

The first episode of the heute-show was broadcast on 26 May 2009. It started out as a monthly show airing on Tuesday, following another satirical program, Neues aus der Anstalt (German for either "News from the Broadcasting Center" or "News from the Lunatic Asylum", with Anstalt being short for either "Sendeanstalt" (Broadcasting Center) or "Irrenanstalt" (Lunatic Asylum)). Following the success of the first six pilot episodes and a "Best of" special in 2009, the heute-show was picked up as a weekly program for a 2009-2010 first season of 24 episodes.

The 2013-14 ninth season had the best ratings of the show's history with reaching around three million viewers at the peak. The episode on 6 June 2014 was the highest-rated episode so far, with 3.90 million viewers and an overall market share from 25.1%. That episode also recorded in the target group ages 14–49 with 1.57 million viewers and 23,5% market share.

In 2014, heute-show correspondent Martin Sonneborn became top candidate of the satirically political party Die PARTEI for the parliament of the European Union. He had to leave the show after becoming a member of the parliament.

The heute-show made national news in October 2014. The episode broadcast on 17 October 2014 dealt with reporters not being allowed to film in the Bundestag anymore. Bundestag secretary Ernst Hebeker was quoted by Oliver Welke, saying that the show "doesn't do political-parliamentary reporting" as the reason for the decision. Welke argued what else they do over the entire runtime of the show if not doing political-parliamentary reporting. He also closed the show with saying that Hebeker would love to get "fan mail". The decision by the Bundestag was picked up by newspapers and several online news sites, and the heute-show was allowed to film in the Bundestag.

In 2017, the heute-show was elected the best satirical show by the audience of the Goldene Kamera awards.[2]

Cast

Christian Ehring, cast member of the Heute-show
  • Oliver Welke, anchorman of the show
  • Martina Hill as Tina Hausten, head of the statistics division
  • Christian Ehring, heute-show expert on numerous subjects
  • Dietrich Hollinderbäumer as Ulrich von Heesen, the show's 70-year-old self-declared "youth correspondent"
  • Hans-Joachim Heist as Gernot Hassknecht, whose role is very similar to Lewis Black's in the Daily Show's "Back in Black" segment
  • Olaf Schubert, correspondent (2009 - )
  • Martin Sonneborn, correspondent (2009 - 2014)
  • Lutz van der Horst, correspondent (2012 - )[3]
  • Carsten van Ryssen, correspondent (2012 - )
  • Dietmar Wischmeyer, expert about so-called VIPs (in the so called Wischmeyers Logbuch der Bekloppten und Bescheuerten translation: Wischmeyer's logbook of the dopey and daft)

Broadcast

Oliver Welke, anchorman and author of the Heute-show

The first two episodes of the show aired on 26 May and 23 June 2009 as pilot episodes. The first season started shortly afterwards on 8 September 2009 and ended on 30 December 2009 with a Best-Of. The show was first aired at 11 PM on Tuesdays, their weekly slot, however, was later on moved to 10:45 PM on Wednesdays.

The second season started on 22 January 2010 and again ended with a Best-of on 8 June 2010. The second season as well as the first changed their weekly slot. While the first few episodes aired at 10:30 PM on Fridays later episodes were moved back to 11 PM on Tuesdays. ZDFneo aired weekly reruns of the newest episode.

The third season started on 27 August 2010 and ended on 17 December with a Best-Of. The show was moved back to Fridays.

From the fourth season on (21 January 2011) they had earned a consistent weekly slot on Fridays. The show always airs on ZDF first and then reruns are aired on other ZDF channels. Like the preceding seasons the fourth season ended with a Best-of.

The fifth season aired between 16 September and 16 December 2011. It is the first season that does not end in a Best-of, but in a review of the year's events.

Several seasons followed, usually there are two per year: The first one airs between January and June and ends with a Best-of, followed by a summer break, the second one begins at the end of summer and ends in December usually with a review of the year's events.

From the twelfth season on the show aired from a new and redesigned studio.

Sometimes the show was not aired due to recent events interfering with it (e.g. on 24 March 2015 when the Germanwings flight 9525 crashed in the Alps or on 13 November 2013 during the 2013 Paris attacks).

The shows popularity gradually increased and the TV ratings are generally high.

In 2017 the show was produced and aired in High-definition for the first time, which in comparison to other TV-shows happened quite late.

The current season (season 18) ended on 8 June 2018.

Seasons and Air Dates

SeasonBeginningEnd
Pilot episodes26 May 200923 June 2009
1 "Pilot season"8 September 200930 December 2009
222 January 20108 of June 2010
327 August 201017 December 2010
421 January 201117 June 2011
516 September 201116 December 2011
627 January 20121 June 2012
731 August 201214 December 2012
825 January 20137 June 2013
96 September 201313 December 2013
1024 January 20146 June 2014
115 September 201419 December 2014
1223 January 201529 May 2015
1311 September 201518 December 2015
1422 January 20163 June 2016
159 September 201616 December 2016
1627 January 20172 June 2017
178 September 201715 December 2017
1826 January 20188 June 2018

Current Airtimes

ChannelAirtime
Friday, 10.30 PM (First Broadcast)
Sunday, 12:30 AM (Encore)
Saturday, 10:30 PM (Encore)
Thursday, 21:45 PM (Encore)

Source: ZDF.de[4]

Course of recording

The program is recorded in Studio 3 of the Cologne production company Brainpool TV every Friday at about 6 PM. Sometimes recorded laughter is even brought in during the performance of the crowd-warmer. This warm-up, including a “best-of“ of former shows (in the past also “fail compilations“), is used to put the audience in the studio in a good mood. During the recording, the audience can independently react and applaud whereas the “warm-up“ keeps in the background and only sends signals occasionally.

Guests

Occasionally the heute-show has guests from the field of journalism (like Steffen Seibert, Maybrit Illner, Hans-Ulrich Jörges) or politics (like Claudia Roth, Wolfgang Bosbach, Wolfgang Kubicki, Hannelore Kraft, Anton Hofreiter, Peter Tauber, Gregor Gysi and Jens Spahn). 27 January 2012 Rainer Brüderle, a German politician and member of the FDP (Free Democratic Party), was a guest in the studio. His rather unclear pronunciation, as well as his Palatine and Rhine-Hessian dialect, has prior been a reoccurring subject in the show. According to Welke, Brüderle had “enhanced the show contentwise like no other.“ With Peter Altmaier on the show in 2013, they were able to welcome a federal minister for the first time. Also, Dirk Niebel (FDP) and Jürgen Trittin (Alliance 90/The Greens) were guests in the Wahlkampfbussi (campaigning pecks) of the heute-show. Comedians and cabaretists are frequent guests on the heute-show, such as Florian Schroeder, Michael Mittermeier, Monika Gruber, Mike Krüger, Bastian Pastewka, Simon Gosejohann, Elton, Timo Wopp, Christoph Sieber, Torsten Sträter, Ingmar Stadelmann, Abdelkarim, Friedemann Weise and Oliver Polak. Many popular German public figures have made cameo appearances on the show, for instance, Kai Pflaume as an “East German teenager,“ Hella von Sinnen as a “lesbian headteacher,“ or Karl Lauterbach as a “ZDF inspector.“ Oliver Kahn once played himself in his position as a ZDF-expert at the coverage of the international football match of Germany-Argentina in September 2014. He also once played a former FC Bayern football player through a video-call in a show of November 2015. Other cameo appearances were Reiner Calmund, Hugo Egon Balder as a “substitute-host,“ Stefan Raab, and Axel Schulz.

Glitches

The show of 22 October 2012, did not air like scheduled at 10.30 PM because of a glitch during the dubbing to the ZDF-Sendezentrum (broadcasting control room) due to a technical error. The ZDF team then decided to air the literature program “Die Vorleser“ (the reader) and the heute-show after that. The delay had negative effects on the viewing figures. The show of 18 March 2011, in which Michael Mittermeier was a guest, ended abruptly 41 seconds earlier than the actual end of the show. Since the heute-show had used the word “fap“ and other sexual innuendos repeatedly in context with the term “nuclear fetishism,“ speculations arose on censorship by ZDF. The press also suspected a deliberate reference to the censorship of the satirical show “Scheibenwischer“ (windshield wiper) of May 1986 (Chernobyl). In an interview in March 2011, however, the producer of the show Georg Hirschberg explained that a technical mistake concerning planning caused the premature end of the show.

gollark: There's a global `keys` API already.
gollark: What do you mean exactly?
gollark: Swap rs.getSides for that and delete the bit for finding ones on the network.
gollark: Also, `peripheral.getNames()` lists all peripherals' names, so you can skip much of the weird logic.
gollark: Ah, no, you want wireless specifically, but peripheral.find can still be used that way.

References

  1. http://oliverwelke.de Retrieved 2010-11-27
  2. "'Publikumswahl - Die beliebteste Satire-Show': 'heute show' (ZDF)". Goldene Kamera (in German). Retrieved 5 March 2017.
  3. Zinser, Kathrin; Pavlic, Christian (8 September 2017). "ZDF-Politsatire: Zehn Gründe, warum wir uns auf die "Heute Show" freuen". stuttgarter-zeitung.de (in German). Retrieved 31 January 2019.
  4. "Programmdatensuche – ZDF.de". ZDF.de (in German). Archived from the original on 2013-02-21. Retrieved 2013-02-21.
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