The Vienna Review

The Vienna Review was founded in 2006[1] by American journalist and director of the Vienna Journalism Institute Dardis McNamee. It was a monthly English language newspaper based in Vienna, Austria, available in print and online. The paper's target audience was the permanent English-speaking community in Austria and Central Europe, as well as expatriates and tourists.

The Vienna Review
September 2011 issue
Editor-in-ChiefDardis McNamee
CategoriesNews magazine
FrequencyMonthly
Circulation10,000
PublisherFalter Verlagsgesellschaft m.b.H
First issueSeptember 2006 (2006-09)
Final issueDecember 2013 (2013-12)
CountryAustria
Based inVienna
LanguageEnglish

Content

The Vienna Review started out as a student newspaper based in the Vienna campus of Webster University.[2] Although Vienna was the focus, the paper made use of Austria's Central European location in covering both Western and Eastern European news and events, and seeking to provide a voice and a forum for Vienna’s international community. Contributors to the paper included writing professionals, academics from think tanks in the area. The paper was a member of Project Syndicate, the Prague-based syndication service supported by the Open Society Foundations.

Contribution

The Vienna Review was published in English on a monthly basis by the Vienna Review Publishing GmbH, since 2011 part of the Falter Verlagsgesellschaft mbH.[3] The Vienna Review had a circulation of about 10,000 copies per month and was available by subscription, at public newsstands, in coffee houses, hotels and such places, and on several airlines. The magazine ceased being published in January 2014.[4] The editorial team proceeded to found a new publication called Metropole – Vienna in English, published by Home Town Media GmbH, a publishing house founded in October 2015.[5]

gollark: i.e. "put security holes in your products but they're not actually allowed to be 'systemic weaknesses' and also you're not allowed to tell anyone".
gollark: No, they passed that stupid "Assistance and Access" law.
gollark: Well, the whole thing of "let's GET RID OF ENCRYPTION we're so smart TERRORISTS" is really a political issue.
gollark: I did say "non-proud UK-dweller", you know.
gollark: Paraphrased: "Who cares what your MATHS says about it not being possible to have encryption only the government can break, we want this impossible thing done by Tuesday!"

References

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