The city editorial office of the "Tages-Anzeiger" moved its workplace to Zurich's St. Peter's Church last week ( persoenlich.com reported ). A win-win situation: The church gets attention, and the newspaper gets heavenly support in the increasingly difficult battle for advertisements and readers. It's actually logical that the "Tages-Anzeiger" goes to church. As a Tagi child, I've always known that no other Swiss medium cultivates the fine art of moralizing with such divine fervor. If Wimbledon had been played with moral clubs instead of tennis balls, the Tagi editorial office would definitely not have been Roger Federer.
The latest victim is the NZZ. In two articles last myanmar rcs data week, the Tagi branded its competitor from Falkenstrasse as the "right-wing favorite newspaper." The theory is that the NZZ is courting "German right-wing populists." The reason: the NZZ published an article that claimed that people without a migration background are no longer in the majority in German cities. The NZZ apologized for the term "bio-Germans" - which is in the Duden dictionary - and deleted it from the Internet. But this did not stop the Tagi from hitting back and putting the "Weltblatt" in the AfD corner . When it comes to competing media, the Tagi knows no restraint: the publishing houses' fight for survival has become tougher.
Sometimes the Tagi is also kind. When various Tamedia titles falsely accused a member of the Council of States from the canton of Thurgau of having harassed participants in the women's strike with obscene gestures, there was a brief apology - without any further consequences. In the church they teach: Grace is a Christian virtue. Above all, in oneself.