This was also proven by veteran
Posted: Sat Feb 01, 2025 10:26 am
When Ringier bosses Michael Ringier and Marc Walder invited guests to an industrial hall in Altstetten last week, only those in the know knew the real reason. A look at the guest list revealed something big: philosopher Sloterdijk stumbled through the rooms, TV star Nina Ruge tucked into appetizers, Federal Councilor Berset warned of another Covid wave. In the end, what really made the publishing house big was revealed: a print magazine called "Interview by Ringier" . On the cover: Roger Federer, symbol of eternal youth. What is astonishing is that the publishing house had already invested two billion Swiss francs in digital transformation.
But the much-talked-about past is not over. Thomas philippines rcs data Gottschalk, who was greeted with a four-minute standing ovation before his "Wetten, dass..?" comeback , the power of which rivaled any Freedom Fighter parade. It was a collective beaming back to a glorious past, when the whole family sat in front of the television.
24 hours later in Leutschenbach, something similar happened: the audience gave a standing salute to TV legend Sepp Trütsch when he received the honorary Prix Walo for his life's work. A not entirely silent protest against the redevelopment plans at Leutschenbach? Perhaps things that are thought to be dead really do live longer than all media theorists believe. This was also the case with the radio talk show "Persönlich", which was awarded a Prix Walo for the first time on Sunday after 46 years ( persoenlich.com reported ). The SRG celebrated this with a euphoric press release. As if they wanted to pat themselves on the back for not abolishing it or broadcasting it in TikTok bites. It was the first positive SRG news in a long time.
But the much-talked-about past is not over. Thomas philippines rcs data Gottschalk, who was greeted with a four-minute standing ovation before his "Wetten, dass..?" comeback , the power of which rivaled any Freedom Fighter parade. It was a collective beaming back to a glorious past, when the whole family sat in front of the television.
24 hours later in Leutschenbach, something similar happened: the audience gave a standing salute to TV legend Sepp Trütsch when he received the honorary Prix Walo for his life's work. A not entirely silent protest against the redevelopment plans at Leutschenbach? Perhaps things that are thought to be dead really do live longer than all media theorists believe. This was also the case with the radio talk show "Persönlich", which was awarded a Prix Walo for the first time on Sunday after 46 years ( persoenlich.com reported ). The SRG celebrated this with a euphoric press release. As if they wanted to pat themselves on the back for not abolishing it or broadcasting it in TikTok bites. It was the first positive SRG news in a long time.