Tiroler Tageszeitung

The Tiroler Tageszeitung is the highest reach of newspaper in the Austrian state of Tyrol. It appears, according to Austrian support control ( OAK ) with eight local expenditures: Schwaz, Reutte, Tyrol, Landeck, Kitzbühel, Kufstein, Innsbruck and Imst in a total print run of about 105,000 copies, which are sold every day around 87,000.

History

The newspaper was founded in 1945 as the successor acquired the Innsbruck messages from the Americans, but already on 10 July 1945 by the French occupying troops. The French occupied the editorial exclusively with Austrian journalists who were not encumbered by Nazi past. As the founding editor in chief Dr. Anton Klotz was appointed, who had been held on the basis of its resistance against the Nazi regime three years in Buchenwald concentration camp prisoner. The newspaper should denazify the population by the selection of their products, to teach her a democratic ethos and provide information on the political, economic and cultural developments that had taken place during the war in the world. Anton Klotz led the sheet (also known as Managing Partner ) until his death in 1950.

Information to the newspaper

According to the Austrian Media Analysis (MA) the newspaper had over Austria in 2007 and reaches 304,000 readers 4.4% of Austrians 14 years. In appearance Tyrol, the range is 59.5 % of the population ( 336,000 readers ). The TT is a cooperative of the Austria Press Agency.

The owner of the Tiroler Tageszeitung, Moser Holding, moved supplement the newspaper The New, but which appeared for the last time on March 31, 2008. In addition, the Moser Holding operates the online offer of tirol.com and the nationwide radio station Life Radio (formerly Antenne Tirol ). The cable television operator Tele system Tyrol was sold to the UPC Austria in the fall of 2007.

The Moser Holding also has interests in a free newspaper publisher and launched in 2006 the Tyrolean Illustrated West as a response to the success of the independent magazine Echo.

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