Jump to content

Neue Post

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Neue Post
Neuepostlogo
Categories
FrequencyWeekly
PublisherBauer Verlag
First issue1948
CompanyBauer Group
CountryGermany
Based inHamburg
LanguageGerman
WebsiteNeue Post
OCLC647804353

Neue Postis a German-language weekly entertainmentnews magazinepublished inHamburg,Germany. It has been in circulation since 1948.

History and profile

[edit]

Neue Postwas established in 1948.[1]The magazine is part of theBauer Group[2]and is published by Bauer Verlag on a weekly basis.[3][4]The company acquiredNeue Postin 1961 when it bought the publisher of the magazine, Kurt Möller Verlag.[5]The headquarters of the weekly is in Hamburg.[3]

Neue Postis apulp magazinewhich is called rainbow press in Germany.[6]The target audience of the magazine is older women.[2]The magazine provides news on celebrities and public figures[4]and includes articles on leisure, fashion and health-related advice.[3]

In the early 1990sNeue Postalong withBunteandFreizeit Revuepublished the photographs ofPrincess Caroline,spouse ofPrince Ernst August von Hannover,which were taken in Paris leading to an unsuccessful legal action by Princess Caroline.[7]

Circulation

[edit]

During the third quarter of 1992Neue Postsold 1,848,000 copies.[8]The circulation of the magazine was down to 1,563,667 copies between October and December 1994.[9]

During the fourth quarter of 2000 its circulation was down to 1,278,012 copies.[10]In 2001Neue Postwas the thirteenth best-selling women's magazine worldwide with a circulation of 1,278,000 copies.[11]The magazine had an average circulation of 994,000 copies in 2003.[12]In the fourth quarter of 2006 its circulation was down to 881,100 copies.[12]The circulation of the magazine was down to 738,370 copies in 2010.[13]

See also

[edit]

List of magazines in Germany

References

[edit]
  1. ^Ulrich Kaiser (February 2002)."The Effects of Website Provision on the Demand for German Women's Magazines".NBER Working Paper No. 8806.doi:10.3386/w8806.
  2. ^ab"Bauer Publishing Group History".Funding Universe.Retrieved1 March2015.
  3. ^abcTristam Carrington-Windo; Katrin Kohl, eds. (2013).Dictionary of Contemporary Germany.New York; London: Routledge. p. 300.ISBN978-1-136-59530-1.
  4. ^ab"German Magazines and Newspapers".Vistawide.Retrieved1 March2015.
  5. ^"History of Bauer Publishing Group".Reference for Business.Retrieved28 March2015.
  6. ^Eckhard Bernstein (2004).Culture and Customs of Germany.Westport, CT; London: Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 120.ISBN978-0-313-32203-7.
  7. ^Nicolas Nohlen (January 2006). "Von Hannover v. Germany. App. no. 59320/00.2004-VI Eur. Ct. H.R.".The American Journal of International Law.100(1): 196–201.doi:10.2307/3518838.JSTOR3518838.S2CID147308444.
  8. ^Georg Hellack (1992)."Press, Radio and Television in the Federal Republic of Germany"(Report).Inter Nationes.Retrieved4 April2015.
  9. ^"Top paid-circulation consumer magazines".Ad Age.17 April 1995.Retrieved15 March2015.
  10. ^Fiona Jebb (13 April 2001)."Campaign report on Germany".Campaign.Retrieved30 March2015.
  11. ^"Top 50 Women's magazines worldwide (by circulation)"(PDF).Magazines.Retrieved30 March2015.
  12. ^ab"European Publishing Monitor"(PDF).Turku School of Economics (Media Group).March 2007. Archived fromthe original(Report)on 10 October 2017.Retrieved27 March2015.
  13. ^"World Magazine Trends 2010/2011"(PDF).FIPP.Archived fromthe original(PDF)on 20 June 2017.Retrieved4 April2015.
[edit]

Official website