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20 Minuten is published in tabloid format. Since 2005 the newspaper has been owned by Express-Zeitung AG , which is jointly owned by Tamedia (majority holding) and Berner Zeitung (17.5%). In the German-speaking parts of Switzerland , specific editions are made for the regions of Basel , Bern , Lucerne , St. Gallen and Zürich .
20 minutes (French pronunciation: [vɛ̃ minyt]) is a French-language newspaper published in Switzerland, launched on 8 March 2006 by Tamedia for the Romandie. [1] It is a free tabloid that gets revenue from advertising. [2] As of 2008, it had a circulation of 221,560.
Its majority stockholder is 20 Min Holding, a leader in free daily newspapers in Switzerland (20 minutes in French and 20 Minuten in German), France , and Spain. 20 Min Holding's majority stockholder is Schibsted, a Norwegian communication group that was founded in 1839, listed on the Oslo Stock Exchange, and has a strong presence in Norway ...
Blick publishes all news online, with free access both to current news and an archive of over 600,000 stories. In 2020, Blick reached 1.2 million users per day for the first time – 42 percent more than in the previous year. [19] As of August 2023, Blick is the most visited news website in Switzerland. [20]
Heute: 2006 2008 Zurich Canton of Zurich Daily .ch: 2007 2009 Zurich Canton of Zurich Daily News: 2007 2009 Daily Burgdorfer Tagblatt 1911 2012 Burgdorf Canton of Bern Five times a week Ultimate successor to the Berner Volksfreund which started in 1831. Frequently changed publishing format.
20 Minutes refers to: ... 20 Minuten, a Swiss German-language newspaper; 20 minutos, a Spanish newspaper; 20 Min, a song by American Rapper Lil Uzi Vert
Additionally, WDR 2's 30-minute round-up of the day's most important news reports, Berichte von heute, is simulcast by WDR 5 on Monday to Friday evenings at 23.30. WDR 5 also carries children's radio programming from KiRaKa at 19.05–20.00 each evening as well as on Sundays at 7.05–8.00 and 14.05–15.00.
During football matches, a short edition of heute-journal is generally broadcast during the half-time break, eliminating the second news summary, stock market report and the final report (usually related to science or culture). The programme usually starts at 9:45pm and runs for 27 minutes, followed by a 3-minute weather forecast.