VM
That is odd. It looks like she is annoyed to see us.
Not sure I like this common German shot of the presenter waiting for the programme to start, it looks incredibly awkward (especially so in this example).
That is odd. It looks like she is annoyed to see us.
RK
That is odd. It looks like she is annoyed to see us.
I'd say she's either in pain or is seriously p*ssed off.
Not sure I like this common German shot of the presenter waiting for the programme to start, it looks incredibly awkward (especially so in this example).
That is odd. It looks like she is annoyed to see us.
I'd say she's either in pain or is seriously p*ssed off.
MO
JA
You don't even have to go back that far to when the entire morning & lunchtime schedule on ARD & ZDF was simulcast, though I think it's just the breakfast & luchtime magazines these days.
SN
This is partly true. It was only the news programmes however (since the 80s, I believe). The 9.00, 10.00 and 12.00 news bulletins (Tagesschau and Heute respectively) were simulcast with their own programming in between, alongside Morgenmagazin & Mittagsmagazin.
ZDF called this to a halt in 2012 and both now produce their own news bulletins, although I don't believe ZDF have any morning news bulletins any more. Morgenmagazin and Mittagsmagazin are still simulcast, as you say. In any case I get the feeling that mornings are a bit of an afterthought. Das Erste's schedule, for example, consists entirely of repeats from the previous afternoon or ancient made-for-TV films...
You will occasionally have the oddity, notably where live sport is being broadcast, where the ARD Mittagsmagazin will only air on ZDF complete with an edition of the Tagesschau, because it's their week to broadcast regardless. The rotation is on a weekly basis but does occasionally get in a muddle and two weeks in a row will come from the same broadcaster...
You don't even have to go back that far to when the entire morning & lunchtime schedule on ARD & ZDF was simulcast, though I think it's just the breakfast & luchtime magazines these days.
This is partly true. It was only the news programmes however (since the 80s, I believe). The 9.00, 10.00 and 12.00 news bulletins (Tagesschau and Heute respectively) were simulcast with their own programming in between, alongside Morgenmagazin & Mittagsmagazin.
ZDF called this to a halt in 2012 and both now produce their own news bulletins, although I don't believe ZDF have any morning news bulletins any more. Morgenmagazin and Mittagsmagazin are still simulcast, as you say. In any case I get the feeling that mornings are a bit of an afterthought. Das Erste's schedule, for example, consists entirely of repeats from the previous afternoon or ancient made-for-TV films...
You will occasionally have the oddity, notably where live sport is being broadcast, where the ARD Mittagsmagazin will only air on ZDF complete with an edition of the Tagesschau, because it's their week to broadcast regardless. The rotation is on a weekly basis but does occasionally get in a muddle and two weeks in a row will come from the same broadcaster...
IU
That library music is called Off The Press.(Name)
From Hong Kong, RTHK's nightly news round up.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sANUWAui9WY
Apparently, the broadcaster also uses the theme and bed for radio news in Chinese (both Cantonese and Mandarin). If it is a library music, can any of you at least name the track, album and library?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sANUWAui9WY
Apparently, the broadcaster also uses the theme and bed for radio news in Chinese (both Cantonese and Mandarin). If it is a library music, can any of you at least name the track, album and library?
That library music is called Off The Press.(Name)