What an opportunity: The publishers could have voiced their criticism live and unedited in front of the camera. They could have explained where the SRG was making life difficult for them and they could have asked Ruedi Matter where he saw opportunities to downsize SRF and save money. The SRF director was available to answer questions on Wednesday. After the premiere a year ago, there was a new edition of "Hallo SRF!" (persoenlich.com reported) .
In order to address not only the audience's concerns india rcs data but also the current media policy debate, the editorial team invited the publishers. "We wanted to have them here in the studio, but unfortunately they all canceled," explained Projer in the introduction. But one person came and is now speaking for his bosses: Markus Gilli.
But the "most famous political presenter from private television" was the wrong person. Unlike on Tele-Züri, he seemed confused and anything but confident. He got tangled up in monologues that were far too long and hurled metaphors wildly. He couldn't cope with the time limit. Finally, and this must have been particularly bitter, some of the 300 guests in the audience booed him loudly. The fact that the private TV man falls so far short of the public broadcaster's staff is undoubtedly bad advertising for the private publishers.