The running joke among
Posted: Sat Feb 01, 2025 10:55 am
The wave of terror in the USA was the beginning of a dark autumn in Switzerland: a shooting spree in Zug, the grounding of Swissair, a major fire in the Gotthard tunnel, the Crossair crash. There was a series of disasters. And something that I have not forgotten to this day: except for the day of the Crossair crash, I had to finish editing every time. my work colleagues: "Aha, Beck is finishing his degree. Let's plan more pages as a precaution." I found it moderately funny.
"The Swiss disappointed," wrote the NZZ in south korea rcs data its report on the four-day golf tournament in Crans-Montana. At least the noble event was worth a whole column in the elite newspaper on Monday. The Olympic Games for disabled athletes, the Paralympics, which are currently being held in Tokyo, are less popular with the journalists on Falkenstrasse. Even the two gold medal victories of wheelchair athlete Manuela Schär and top wheelchair athlete Marcel Hug at the weekend were ignored in the NZZ columns: No equal chance, neither in the NZZ on Sunday nor in the Monday edition - not a single line.
In contrast, the often-criticized Swiss television showed how reporting on competitions in a fringe sport such as those for the disabled can be attractively staged: every day at 7 p.m., the disabled Jahn Graf presents the magazine "Para-Graf" on SRF two and provides up-to-date information on the performances and results of the 27 Swiss para-athletes in Japan. This is what real integration looks like. Conclusion: NZZ disappoints.
"The Swiss disappointed," wrote the NZZ in south korea rcs data its report on the four-day golf tournament in Crans-Montana. At least the noble event was worth a whole column in the elite newspaper on Monday. The Olympic Games for disabled athletes, the Paralympics, which are currently being held in Tokyo, are less popular with the journalists on Falkenstrasse. Even the two gold medal victories of wheelchair athlete Manuela Schär and top wheelchair athlete Marcel Hug at the weekend were ignored in the NZZ columns: No equal chance, neither in the NZZ on Sunday nor in the Monday edition - not a single line.
In contrast, the often-criticized Swiss television showed how reporting on competitions in a fringe sport such as those for the disabled can be attractively staged: every day at 7 p.m., the disabled Jahn Graf presents the magazine "Para-Graf" on SRF two and provides up-to-date information on the performances and results of the 27 Swiss para-athletes in Japan. This is what real integration looks like. Conclusion: NZZ disappoints.