• Tagore dance festival ends
  • Bijoy Sarkar’s songs presented
  • More power woes on cards
  • Yet another scam
  • Obama morphing into Cheney?
  • A review of proposed budget
  • Dispelling perceptions of uncaring govt
  • Evil still flourishes
  • Grabbing of Gulshan Lake
  • Morsi mulls cabinet amid Tahrir sit-in
  • German daily sent to all 41 million households
  • BPC loss drops by Tk 250cr a month on falling int'l oil price
  • NBR finds Tk 174cr VAT dodge by WASA
  • Italy advance as England pay penalty once more
  • Pan Pacific Sonargaon-New Age Euro 2012 Adda held
  • Rajuk starts work on open park on land of Wonderland
  • Discussion calls for removing flaws in budget
  • HC order to amend law to end custodial torture still unheeded
  • Change constitution for credible elections
  • Rain, flash flood kill 3, maroon thousands
  • University teachers to retire at 65
  • JS passes bill on service conditions of state-owned factory workers
  • Transport workers threaten strike to press home five-point demands
HOME  INTERNATIONAL
  
Print Friendly and PDF

German daily sent to all 41 million households

Reuters . Berlin

Germany’s best-selling newspaper was given away free to almost all of the country’s 41 million households on Saturday in a controversial celebration of the daily’s 60th anniversary that set a world record for largest circulation.
Bild newspaper - a tabloid-style daily both feared and respected for its massive influence in Germany but also known for its hard-hitting campaigns and photos of nude women - sent 41 million copies to all but 2,00,000 postal addresses of people who expressly requested not to receive Saturday’s newspaper.
‘Free Bild for everyone!’ wrote the daily in two-inch high letters on page one above an open letter from editor in chief Kai Dieckmann. ‘Bild is celebrating its 60th birthday today. And this newspaper is a birthday present for you,’ he wrote.
Bild said Guinness World Records in Germany has certified the print run as ‘the largest circulation for the free special edition of a newspaper’.
Bild, which likes to pride itself for having its finger on the pulse of what makes ordinary Germans tick, normally costs 70 cents per issue.
Critics of the newspaper organised a boycott of the free delivery and about 2,00,000 people filled out forms requested they not receive the Saturday edition. Bild said that represented 0.6 per cent of German households.
‘I don’t want that rag in my house even if they give it away for free,’ said Yvonne Wagner, a 43-year-old secretary in Berlin. ‘I don’t want to read it and I wouldn’t even want to use it to wrap fish in or to stuff my wet shoes with it.’



Reader’s Comment

comments powered by Disqus
   
    Tuesday, June 26, 2012

Online Poll


Do you agree with the government’s move to filter contents posted on social networking sites such as Facebook and twitter and on blogs?

  • Yes
  • No
  • No comment
Ajax Loader

Archives

Select MonthYear

May 2013

SunMonTueWedThuFri Sat
01020304
05060708091011
12131415161718
19202122232425
262728293031