After the explosive TV show, SoBli boss Christine Maier suggested that I have a "reconciliation meeting" with Andreas Thiel on her editorial team, which I of course categorically rejected because that would have been nothing more than shallow sensationalism.
So the SoBli editorial team had to come up with something else for the next issue to continue the story, and called for my resignation on no less than the first three pages. The whole thing poland rcs data was portrayed - including the corresponding caricatures - as a pure cockerel fight, without the actual topic being seriously addressed. In her editorial, Christine Maier (49) said that the "old cockerel" should step down and - quote - make way for "a young hen". Then I remembered that Ms Maier had offered to be my substitute presenter before my first broadcast and later on, should I be absent due to illness – a suggestion that I had dutifully passed on to the Head of Information...
But even so-called serious newspapers lost their temper at this hyped-up story. In the NZZ am Sonntag , Francesco Benini spread a hair-raising conspiracy theory (warning: quality journalism!), citing a single anonymous informant, and doubled down on it in a commentary in which he called for the cancellation of this "freak show". Shortly after my show started over three years ago, Benini asked me to show him the ratings. As they were very good, he emailed me back: "Okay, okay, then I'll have to wait a little longer before publishing the bad story." With the many voices of the people behind him, he felt his time had come.