Deutscher Fernsehpreis

The Deutscher Fernsehpreis (English: German Television Award) is a German award for television programming, created in 1999 by German television channels Das Erste, ZDF, RTL and Sat.1.[1] It is awarded annually. It was created to be an equivalent to the Emmy Awards, though it is not organized by an academy. The Fernsehpreis is the successor to both the Telestar (Das Erste and ZDF) and the Goldener Löwe (RTL) awards.[2]

History

The first award took place on 2 October 1999 in Cologne. Every year another of the participating stations broadcast the ceremony:

# Date Year Host(s) Network Site
1st October 2, 1999 1998–99 Jochen Busse, Johannes B. Kerner, Gabi Bauer and Kai Pflaume RTL[lower-alpha 1] Coloneum Cologne
2nd October 7, 2000 1999–2000 Ulla Kock am Brink ZDF[lower-alpha 1]
3rd October 6, 2001 2000–01 Anke Engelke and Hape Kerkeling Sat.1[lower-alpha 1]
4th October 5, 2002 2001–02 Sandra Maischberger and Dirk Bach Das Erste[lower-alpha 1]
5th September 27, 2003 2002–03 Günther Jauch RTL[lower-alpha 2]
6th October 9, 2004 2003–04 Thomas Gottschalk ZDF[lower-alpha 1]
7th October 15, 2005 2004–05 Anke Engelke and Hugo Egon Balder Sat.1[lower-alpha 1]
8th October 20, 2006 2005–06 Jörg Pilawa Das Erste[lower-alpha 2]
9th September 29, 2007 2006–07 Marco Schreyl RTL[lower-alpha 2]
10th October 11, 2008 2007–08 Thomas Gottschalk ZDF[lower-alpha 1]
11th September 26, 2009 2008–09 Anke Engelke and Bastian Pastewka1 Sat.1[lower-alpha 2]
12th October 9, 2010 2009–10 Sandra Maischberger and Kurt Krömer Das Erste[lower-alpha 1]
13th October 2, 2011 2010–11 Marco Schreyl and Nazan Eckes RTL[lower-alpha 1]
14th October 2, 2012 2011–12 Oliver Welke and Olaf Schubert ZDF[lower-alpha 3]
15th October 2, 2013 2012–13 Oliver Pocher and Cindy aus Marzahn Sat.1[lower-alpha 3]
16th October 2, 2014 2013–14 Sandra Maischberger, Hans Sigl and Klaas Heufer-Umlauf Das Erste[lower-alpha 1]
17th January 13, 2016 2014–15 Barbara Schöneberger RTL[lower-alpha 4] Rheinterrasse Düsseldorf
18th February 2, 2017 2016 Barbara Schöneberger ZDF[lower-alpha 4]
19th January 26, 2018 2017 Barbara Schöneberger Sat.1[lower-alpha 5] Palladium Cologne
20th January 31, 2019 2018 Barbara Schöneberger and Steffen Hallaschka Das Erste[lower-alpha 6] Rheinterrasse Düsseldorf
21st June 17, 2020[lower-alpha 7] 2019–20 none[lower-alpha 8] none[lower-alpha 9] none[lower-alpha 10]
22nd 2020–21 RTL

Notes

  1. The ceremony was broadcast on television one day later.
  2. The ceremony was live broadcast on television.
  3. The ceremony was broadcast on television two days later.
  4. no live broadcast of the ceremony on television; only a 30- to 45-minute summary of the ceremony
  5. no live broadcast or summary of the ceremony on television
  6. The ceremony was live broadcast on the web stream; two hour summary of the ceremony on television
  7. The ceremony was originally scheduled to be held on June 6, 2020, but the ceremony was canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[3] The winners were announced in an official press release on June 17, 2020.[4]
  8. The ceremony was canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[3]
  9. The ceremony was canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[3] Originally the broadcaster RTL was supposed to broadcast the ceremony.
  10. The ceremony was originally scheduled to be held at the Coloneum Cologne, but the ceremony was canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[3]

References

  1. "Der Preis" (in German). Der Deutsche Fernsehpreis. Retrieved 10 October 2010.
  2. Zwaenepoel, Tom (2004). Dem guten Wahrheitsfinder auf der Spur. Königshausen & Neumann. p. 270. ISBN 978-3-8260-2879-3.
  3. Lückerath, Thomas (March 30, 2020). "Screenforce Days und Fernsehpreis-Verleihung abgesagt". DWDL.de (in German). Retrieved September 2, 2020.
  4. Niemeier, Timo (June 17, 2020). "Und der Deutsche Fernsehpreis 2020 geht an..." DWDL.de (in German). Retrieved September 2, 2020.
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