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Rundfunk Berlin-Brandenburg
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Rundfunk Berlin-Brandenburg (pronounced [ˈʁʊntfʊŋk bɛʁˌliːn ˈbʁandn̩bʊʁk] ⓘ; "Berlin-Brandenburg Broadcasting"), commonly shortened to RBB (pronounced [ˌɛʁbeːˈbeː] ⓘ; stylized as rbb), is an institution under public law (national broadcaster) for the German states of Berlin and Brandenburg, based in Berlin and Potsdam. RBB was established on 1 May 2003 through the merger of Sender Freies Berlin (SFB) and Ostdeutscher Rundfunk Brandenburg (ORB), based in Potsdam, and is a member of the Association of PSBs in the Federal Republic of Germany (ARD).
Key Information
Aside from its two main studios in Berlin and Potsdam, RBB also has regional studios in Cottbus and Frankfurt (Oder), and regional offices in Perleberg and Prenzlau. RBB also operates ARD's studio in Warsaw; the responsibility changes every five years between RBB and WDR (Westdeutscher Rundfunk). RBB also plays out ARD's digital channels from a center in Potsdam. RBB and WDR are jointly responsible for ARD's television studio in Berlin.
History
[edit]
RBB was founded on 25 June 2002 on the basis of a state treaty between the states of Berlin and Brandenburg. As a result, RBB is required to treat both states equally "with respect to the regional content needs".
In 2022 there were complains about nepotism of rbb-director Patricia Schlesinger. The public prosecutor started an investigation and Schlesinger stepped back from the office as ARD-director and rbb-director.[1]
Organization and finances
[edit]RBB Directors-general
[edit]The first director-general of the RBB was Dagmar Reim, from 1 May 2003 to 30 June 2016, at an annual salary of €220,000.[2] Her successor Patricia Schlesinger has been in office since 1 July 2016 and the annual salary has risen to €257,000.[3]
Finances
[edit]Every household in Germany is legally required to pay monthly €18.36 licence fee -the "Rundfunkbeitrag" (broadcast contribution) to finance the public broadcast system.[4] The fee is collected by Beitragsservice von ARD, ZDF und Deutschlandradio. RBB's revenues from the licence fee amounted to
- €376.535 million in 2013[5]
- €430.722 million in 2014[5]
- €413.004 million in 2015[6]
- €401.915 million in 2016[6]
Number of employees
[edit]In 2016 RBB had an average number of 1,938 permanent employees.[6]
Channels
[edit]Television
[edit]- RBB Fernsehen – Berlin and Brandenburg's regional public-broadcasting TV channel (successor to SFB 1 and ORB TV channels). Between 19.30 and 20.00, the channel transmits separate regional news programmes for Berlin ("Abendschau") and Brandenburg ("Brandenburg Aktuell")
- Das Erste – Germany's main television network, of which RBB – as a member of ARD – contributes 7% of programming hours
- Phoenix – ARD and ZDF's joint news, events and current-affairs channel
- KiKA – ARD and ZDF's joint children's channel
- arte – European cultural channel
- 3sat – cultural channel from ARD, ZDF, ORF (Austrian Broadcasting), and SRG (Swiss Broadcasting)
Radio
[edit]- rbb 88.8 – radio station for Berlin from Berlin
- Antenne Brandenburg – public station for Brandenburg from Potsdam with regional information from the studios in Potsdam, Cottbus, Frankfurt (Oder), Perleberg and Prenzlau
- Radioeins – radio station for people aged 25 and above
- Fritz – station aimed at 14- to 24-year-olds
- radio3 – cultural channel from Berlin
- Inforadio – news channel from Berlin
- Sorbischer Rundfunk – a joint channel with MDR in the Sorbian language
- COSMO – station from WDR for Germans and foreigners, produced in cooperation with Radio Bremen and RBB, (replaced RBB's own station, Radio Multikulti, on 31 December 2008)
Notable productions
[edit]RBB produces episodes of the crime series Tatort and Polizeiruf 110 for ARD. It also produces Kontraste, a political show and the satirical show Nuhr im Ersten (formerly Satiregipfel and Scheibenwischer) for ARD. From 2003 to 2005, RBB broadcast the Kurt Krömer Show, which attracted attention nationwide. RBB has produced the show's successor, Bei Krömers, for ARD since 2005.
The regional news show Abendschau has a high profile in the capital region. Since 1958, initially with a slot in ARD including nationwide transmission of the Berlin visit of John F. Kennedy, and later distributed under SFB-frequency, Abendschau reports on politics, economy, sports in Berlin and as well as news from the various districts and boroughs of the city.
RBB produces Ohrenbär, aimed at an audience of four and eight-year-olds.
Logo history
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ tagesschau.de. "rbb stellt Leiterin der Intendanz frei". tagesschau.de (in German). Retrieved 10 August 2022.
- ^ Ehrenberg, Markus (12 August 2010). "220 000 Euro für RBB-Intendantin Dagmar Reim" [€220,000 for RBB's general-director Dagmar Reim]. Der Tagesspiegel (in German). Retrieved 16 April 2018.
- ^ "So viel verdienen Deutschlands Intendanten" [This is how much Germany's TV general-directors earn]. Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung (in German). 27 May 2017. Retrieved 16 April 2018.
- ^ "Der Rundfunkbeitrag - Informationen zur Beitragssenkung". Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 9 March 2016.
- ^ a b "Ertrags- und Aufwandsrechnung des RBB 2014" (PDF) (in German). ARD. Retrieved 15 April 2018.
- ^ a b c "Zahlen und Fakten 2017" (PDF) (in German). Rundfunk Berlin-Brandenburg. p. 5. Retrieved 15 April 2018.
External links
[edit]
Media related to Rundfunk Berlin-Brandenburg at Wikimedia Commons
- rbb Homepage (in German)
Rundfunk Berlin-Brandenburg
View on GrokipediaRundfunk Berlin-Brandenburg (rbb) is the public-law broadcaster statutorily responsible for radio and television services in the German states of Berlin and Brandenburg, serving a combined population of approximately 6.4 million.[1]
Formed on 1 May 2003 as the unified state institution for the region, it succeeded Sender Freies Berlin and Ostdeutscher Rundfunk Brandenburg, and integrates into the ARD consortium to deliver both local content and contributions to nationwide broadcasts.[2][3] rbb operates the television channel rbb Fernsehen alongside six radio stations, such as rbb 88.8, radioeins, Fritz, and Antenne Brandenburg, with funding derived from the household-based Rundfunkbeitrag fee.[4][5]
The organization has marked its role in regional journalism and cultural programming but gained prominence through governance challenges, including the 2022 resignation of director-general Patricia Schlesinger following revelations of non-competitive contract awards, elevated consultant fees, and questionable use of public resources, which intensified scrutiny over administrative transparency and fiscal discipline in Germany's public broadcasting sector.[6][7]
History
Formation and Early Development
The Sender Freies Berlin (SFB) was founded on 1 June 1954 as the public broadcaster for West Berlin, with its first radio broadcast occurring at 4:55 a.m. and television operations commencing in September of that year as part of the ARD network.[8] The Ostdeutscher Rundfunk Brandenburg (ORB) was established on 12 October 1991 to serve the state of Brandenburg following German reunification, launching its radio services immediately and television programming on 1 January 1992.[8] Cooperation between SFB and ORB began in the early 1990s with joint radio ventures such as Radio B Zwei in 1992 and Fritz in 1993, expanding to shared news and cultural programming by the mid-1990s.[8] A 1999 study commissioned by SFB identified substantial economic benefits in a full merger, including resource pooling and cost efficiencies for the small-coverage areas of Berlin and Brandenburg.[8] Formal merger talks advanced in 2001, culminating in the state treaty signed on 25 June 2002, which led to the dissolution of both entities and the creation of Rundfunk Berlin-Brandenburg (RBB) on 1 May 2003 under the leadership of Intendantin Dagmar Reim.[8][9] In its initial years, RBB integrated operations across Berlin and Potsdam-Babelsberg, launching unified programming such as Kulturradio in 2003 and covering major events like the Kirchentag.[9] Early initiatives included public events like the 2004 rbb-Lauf and new formats such as Kurt Krömer's television debut, alongside radio innovations like "Ein Mann auf Hartz IV" in 2005.[9] By 2008, however, the organization encountered financial strains, prompting program reductions and operational streamlining to address budget shortfalls.[9]Key Mergers and Structural Changes
Rundfunk Berlin-Brandenburg (RBB) was established on 1 May 2003 through the merger of Sender Freies Berlin (SFB), the public broadcaster for Berlin founded in 1954, and Ostdeutscher Rundfunk Brandenburg (ORB), created in 1991 for the state of Brandenburg following German reunification.[10][11] The merger process gained momentum in early 2002 when representatives from the governments of Berlin and Brandenburg agreed on the fusion, subject to ratification by their respective state parliaments via a Rundfunkstaatsvertrag (broadcasting state treaty).[11] This structural change consolidated two separate ARD member organizations into a single entity serving both states, addressing post-reunification redundancies in programming and administration while preserving regional identities through dual headquarters: SFB's facilities at Masurenallee in Berlin for television and ORB's site in Potsdam for radio operations.[12] Prior to the full merger, SFB and ORB had pursued cooperative ventures to streamline operations, including the joint launch of the cultural radio station RADIOkultur on 3 October 1997. The 2003 integration involved unifying staff, budgets, and channels, with Dagmar Reim appointed as the inaugural Intendantin (director-general) in March 2003; she immediately implemented cost-cutting measures, including program reductions, to achieve synergies estimated at several million euros annually in administrative savings.[13] This reform reduced overlapping services, such as regional news and cultural output, but faced internal resistance over job impacts, with approximately 1,200 employees from the predecessor organizations forming the initial RBB workforce.[10] The merger reflected broader ARD efforts to adapt to fiscal pressures and demographic shifts in eastern Germany, creating a more efficient regional broadcaster without dissolving state-specific mandates.[14] No subsequent mergers have occurred, though RBB has undergone internal reorganizations, such as digital transition initiatives, to maintain viability amid declining traditional audiences.Post-2003 Evolution and Reforms
Following the merger's operational start on May 1, 2003, RBB underwent initial consolidation efforts, including over 1,000 internal relocations between Berlin and Potsdam in the first year to streamline operations across the two states.[15] By late 2003, the broadcaster launched Radio Kultur, a new culture-focused radio program replacing older formats to modernize regional offerings.[16] These steps addressed post-fusion redundancies but highlighted ongoing challenges in integrating the legacies of Sender Freies Berlin and Ostdeutscher Rundfunk Brandenburg, with program innovations continuing into subsequent years, such as expanded cultural and regional content.[16] In 2018, marking 15 years of operation, RBB introduced new television programming accents to enhance viewer engagement, amid broader shifts toward digital media adaptation within the ARD network.[17] However, structural inefficiencies persisted, prompting reform discussions on governance and funding oversight, as supervisory bodies faced criticism for inadequate control over expenditures.[18] A 2022 draft state treaty proposed enhanced regional ties, including a "Brandenburg quota" for content representation and stricter financial controls to better align with state-specific needs.[19] The 2022 scandal involving then-Director-General Patricia Schlesinger intensified reform pressures, with allegations of wasteful consulting contracts, nepotism in appointments, and unauthorized expenditures totaling millions of euros, leading to her resignation on August 16, 2022.[20] This exposed systemic oversight failures, including delayed audits and high executive compensation, fueling calls for top-down restructuring, such as capping the intendant's salary at 180,000 euros annually as recommended by state audit offices in 2023.[21] Subsequent legal disputes over severance pay continued into 2025, with a July 2025 Berlin court ruling partially upholding Schlesinger's claims but requiring repayments exceeding 200,000 euros for alleged breaches, underscoring persistent governance vulnerabilities.[22][23] Broader 2023 state treaty amendments aimed to facilitate quicker responses to digital shifts but were criticized for entrenching traditional broadcasting models over innovative online reforms.[24] These events positioned RBB as a focal point for wider public broadcasting efficiency debates, emphasizing the need for enhanced accountability amid recurring financial scrutiny.[25]Governance and Leadership
Directors-General and Succession
The Directors-General (Intendanten) of Rundfunk Berlin-Brandenburg (RBB) are elected by the RBB Broadcasting Council (Rundfunkrat) for fixed terms, typically six years, with the possibility of re-election, as stipulated in the RBB state treaty governing its operations.[26] The position oversees strategic direction, programming, and administration of the public broadcaster, which was established on May 1, 2003, through the merger of Sender Freies Berlin (SFB) and Ostdeutscher Rundfunk Brandenburg (ORB).[27]| Name | Term | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Dagmar Reim | May 1, 2003 – June 30, 2016 | First Intendantin post-merger; previously director at NDR's Hamburg state studio; elected March 25, 2003, by the provisional broadcasting council to lead integration efforts.[27] |
| Patricia Schlesinger | July 1, 2016 – August 8, 2022 | Elected April 7, 2016; resigned amid investigations into allegations of nepotism, improper contracting, and misuse of public funds, including high-value external consultant deals and family-linked hires; also served as ARD chair until August 2022.[28][29] |
| Ulrike Demmer | September 1, 2023 – present | Elected June 16, 2023, by the Rundfunkrat after a protracted selection process involving candidate withdrawals and public scrutiny; former deputy government spokesperson; initiated cost-cutting measures, including staff reductions and facility reviews, to address inherited financial strains.[30][31][32] |
Supervisory and Broadcasting Councils
The Rundfunkrat serves as the primary broadcasting council of Rundfunk Berlin-Brandenburg (rbb), responsible for overseeing compliance with the broadcaster's mandate as defined in the rbb-Staatsvertrag, particularly regarding program principles under §3, and advising the Intendantin or Intendant on general programming matters per §13 and §21 of the treaty.[38][39] It elects the Intendantin or Intendant with the approval of the relevant state administrative boards, approves annual business reports, budgets, statutes, and telemedia concepts via the Drei-Stufen-Test, and establishes programming guidelines.[38] The council comprises 29 members, with one position currently vacant, appointed for four-year terms to represent diverse societal groups without direct ties to parties or organizations, ensuring broad public interest oversight as stipulated in §14 Abs.1 of the rbb-Staatsvertrag.[38] Meetings are held publicly in Berlin or Potsdam, with members receiving €400 monthly plus €75 per session; the chair earns €700 monthly, and vice-chairs or committee chairs €500.[38] It operates subcommittees including the Programmausschuss, Haushalts- und Finanzausschuss, and Telemedien-Ausschuss.[38] The Verwaltungsrat functions as the supervisory council, focusing on monitoring the Intendantin or Intendant's business management and financial operations while excluding oversight of content creation and programming design.[40][41] Composed of eight members serving four-year terms, it includes seven individuals elected by the Rundfunkrat—at least three of whom must be women—and one representative selected by the Personalrat (staff council).[40][42] Meetings are non-public, and the council advises on administrative and fiscal matters to safeguard public funds derived from broadcasting fees.[38] Recent reforms, effective as of September 2025, require members to include individuals qualified for judicial office and those holding a Wirtschaftsprüferexamen (auditing exam), enhancing financial scrutiny; the council now also appoints the administrative director on the Intendantin's proposal.[43] These councils collectively ensure accountability in rbb's operations, with the Rundfunkrat emphasizing programmatic independence and the Verwaltungsrat prioritizing economic efficiency, though both have faced scrutiny amid leadership transitions and financial disputes, such as ongoing legal proceedings involving former Intendantin Patricia Schlesinger as of August 2025.[44][45] The structures align with broader ARD framework principles, where broadcasting councils enforce state treaty obligations without direct governmental interference.[46]Internal Organizational Structure
The internal organizational structure of Rundfunk Berlin-Brandenburg (RBB) is headed by the Intendantin, Ulrike Demmer, who has held the position since September 1, 2023, and forms the Direktorium alongside appointed directors responsible for strategic oversight.[47] This executive body coordinates the broadcaster's operations, which are segmented into core directorates focused on programming and support functions.[48] The Programmdirektion manages content creation, journalistic output, and distribution across RBB's television, radio, and digital channels, encompassing regional studios in Berlin, Potsdam, Cottbus, and Frankfurt (Oder). It oversees specialized units for news (e.g., rbb24), cultural programming, and ARD collaborations, ensuring alignment with public service mandates while adapting to multimedia demands.[48] Recent leadership transitions, including the departure of Programmdirektorin Katrin Günther in 2025, have prompted internal reviews to streamline production amid cost pressures.[49] Complementing this, the Verwaltungs-, Produktions- und Betriebsdirektion, led by Prof. Dr. Nicole Küchler-Stahn since August 1, 2024, handles administrative, technical production, and operational infrastructure, including human resources, IT systems, finance, and facilities management across sites like the Potsdam-Babelsberg studios. This directorate implements efficiency reforms, such as automating media production processes and reducing administrative overhead, as part of broader savings targets exceeding 20 million euros annually. Sub-units include media production divisions (e.g., HA Medienproduktion) and support services like the Inhouse-Versorgungszentrum (IVZ) under Dr. Georg Greten.[48][50][51] RBB also operates subsidiaries for specialized functions, including rbb Media GmbH for ancillary commercial services and the electronic media school (ems) for journalist training, which integrate with core operations but maintain semi-autonomous structures. Internal compliance mechanisms, such as the Ombudsperson role held by Dr. Stefanie Lejeune until January 2025, support ethical and regulatory adherence across departments.[48] The structure, as detailed in the May 9, 2025, organigramm, emphasizes cross-departmental collaboration for digital transformation while addressing ongoing financial scrutiny from public fee revenues.[50]Funding and Financial Operations
Public Broadcasting Fees and Revenue Sources
The primary revenue source for Rundfunk Berlin-Brandenburg (rbb) is the Rundfunkbeitrag, a mandatory household fee that funds Germany's public service broadcasters. Introduced in 2013 to replace device-based licensing, the fee amounts to 18.36 euros per month per residential unit, irrespective of the number of occupants or possession of radio or television equipment, with collection handled centrally by the Beitragsservice of ARD, ZDF, and Deutschlandradio.[52][53] This structure ensures stable, non-commercial financing, with exemptions available only for specific groups such as certain low-income recipients of social benefits; however, exemption rules are set to tighten from October 2025, potentially increasing the payer base.[54] The Rundfunkbeitrag revenues are pooled nationally and redistributed: ARD, which includes rbb as a regional member, receives roughly 53% of the total, with internal allocations to individual Landesrundfunkanstalten like rbb determined by a distribution key factoring in population size, land area, and historical precedents. For rbb, serving Berlin (population approximately 3.7 million) and Brandenburg (2.6 million) as of 2023 estimates, this yields the bulk of its budget; the 2024 economic plan projected 437.6 million euros specifically from broadcasting contributions.[55] Total fee collections nationwide exceeded 8.5 billion euros annually in recent years, underscoring the fee's role in enabling rbb's operations without reliance on advertising for core programming. Minor supplementary sources include limited commercial income from advertising slots on ARD's "third programs" (regional channels with restricted ad times) and ancillary revenues such as event sponsorships or sales of program rights, which collectively account for under 10% of rbb's funding. State governments of Berlin and Brandenburg provide occasional targeted grants for special projects, like cultural or educational content, but these do not form a structural dependency. Overall, the fee-dominated model has sustained rbb's budget, enabling a 2023 surplus after cost-cutting measures, though it has drawn scrutiny for inefficiencies amid rising administrative costs.[56][57]Budget Allocation and Expenditure Patterns
The budget of Rundfunk Berlin-Brandenburg (RBB) is primarily derived from the nationwide public broadcasting contribution (Rundfunkbeitrag), distributed through the ARD network, with revenues totaling €514.7 million in 2021 and €531.8 million in 2022.[58] Total expenditures reached €583.1 million in 2021 and €552.2 million in 2022, resulting in operating deficits of €68.4 million and €20.4 million, respectively, partly offset by prior reserves.[58] For 2023, actual expenditures fell to €522.6 million against revenues of €557.7 million, yielding a surplus after planned cuts.[56] [59] Expenditure allocation emphasizes personnel and program production, with the following breakdown for 2021 and 2022 (in millions of euros):| Category | 2021 | 2022 |
|---|---|---|
| Personnel costs | 220.9 | 170.6 |
| Program production (e.g., copyrights and production fees) | 123.7 | 134.7 |
| Other operational (administration) | 92.7 | 97.6 |
| Investments | 23.6 | 22.1 |
| Total | 583.1 | 552.2 |