Julian Reichelt | |
---|---|
Born | |
Alma mater | Axel-Springer-Academy |
Occupation | Journalist |
Years active | 2002–present |
Notable credit | Editor-in-chief of Bild |
Julian Reichelt (born 15 June 1980) is a German journalist. From February 2017 to October 2021, he was chairman of the editors-in-chief and editor-in-chief digital of Bild, Germany's largest and highest-circulation tabloid.[1] Reichelt was fired over a sexual misconduct probe, after a story appeared in The New York Times.
Early life
Julian Reichelt was born in Hamburg in 1980 and grew up in the district of Othmarschen. His mother Katrin Reichelt works as a freelance journalist on medical topics including a website on homeopathy. His father Hans-Heinrich Reichelt was an editor of the Berlin edition of Bild and works as a freelance journalist. The couple founded a publishing house for medical journalism and GLOBULIX.net.[2][3] Reichelt attended Othmarschen Gymnasium, and graduated in 2000.[4] From 2002 to 2003, he worked as a trainee for Bild before completing his training as a journalist at the Axel-Springer-Akademie.[5]
Career
Reichelt reported from Afghanistan, Georgia, Thailand, Iraq, Sudan, and Lebanon partly as a war correspondent, and worked as a culinary reporter in 2007.[6] Starting in February 2014, Reichelt served as the editor-in-chief of the Internet offshoot of Bild as successor to Manfred Hart.[7] In February 2017 he succeeded Kai Diekmann as chairman of the editors-in-chief.[8]
In August 2015, Reichelt opposed an accreditation agreement and in his position as editor-in-chief, accused alleged Islamic State fighters in a trial before the Higher Regional Court of Celle, showing only their pixelated faces, as their guilt had not yet been proven. As a result, Reichelt was excluded as a reporter.[9]
In February 2016, the German Press Agency criticized Bild´s misrepresentation of Russian military operations in Syria under the title "Putin and Assad bomb on". The reference was an agreement on a ceasefire within a week. The article was said to have given an untruthful impression that Russia had broken the ceasefire that had just been agreed, and was assessed to have expressed disapproval in accordance with Section 12 of the Complaints Regulation.[10] Reichelt stated that because of this case, the German Press Agency would "make itself the stooge of the Kremlin propaganda".[11]
Legal issues
In March 2021, a report by Spiegel announced that Reichelt would have to face an in-house investigation. Among other things, it described a "Reichelt system" of institutionalized abuse of power and the exploitation of relationships with young female employees. In response, Bild publisher Axel Springer SE released a statement explaining that it was investigating "accusations of abuse of power in connection with consensual relationships and drug consumption in the workplace."[12][13] In March 2021, Reichelt acknowledged having a mixture of professional and private relationships.
On October 17, 2021, The New York Times reported the Springer media group's plans to take over Politico, and the testimony of a female employee to investigators from Freshfields law firm whom Springer had hired for the internal inquiry. "If they find out that I'm having an affair with a trainee, I'll lose my job," Reichelt told her in November 2016, according to her testimony. Just before the editor spoke, another woman at the paper lodged a sexual harassment complaint against him. He continued the relationship, even after he was promoted to chief editor in 2017. He had her come to a hotel room near the Axel Springer high-rise in Berlin and promoted her to a management role. She felt overwhelmed role. After she was transferred to another position, another editor told her that he was tired of employing women with whom Reichelt had relationships.[14][15]
The New York Times article also dealt with allegations against Reichelt that had become known in the spring and described research that the Ippen Investigative Team (Frankfurter Rundschau, Münchner Merkur, TZ) had carried out and thereby gained access to internal documents. The New York Times article revealed new details of the Reichelt case. Reichelt married in 2016, and apparently forged divorce papers in order to convince one of his employees of his availability. In addition, he had instructed an additional payment of 5,000 euros for an employee, with the request not to discuss it.[16] However, publisher Dirk Ippen stopped the publication without giving legal or editorial reasons.[17] Following the New York Times article, Reichelt was fired, because of new allegations following the compliance proceedings.[18][19]
In 2021, Süddeutsche Zeitung reported "Döpfner's role in the Reichelt affair and his suitability as President of the Bundesverband Digitalpublisher und Zeitungsverleger will have to be examined very carefully."[20]
Time after Springer
From July 2022, Reichelt went online with the show “Achtung Reichelt” on YouTube. It was initially unclear where Reichelt got the financing for the elaborate studio productions.[21] Later it get known, that the businessmen Frank Gotthard, who has close ties to CDU is financing Reichelt and his projects.
Gotthard is also the financie of the right populist media portal "Nius" of Reichelt.[22] The “Nius” portal went online at the beginning of July 2023. Jan David Sutthoff is responsible for an editor-in-chief who is not part of "Achtung Reichelt". The ex-Bild journalists Sebastian Vorbach and Willi Haentjes complete the editorial team. The 30-person editorial team also includes the former Bild editors Ralf Schuler, Giovanna Winterfeldt and Julius Böhm, who worked with Reichelt on media projects before "Nius", as well as Judith Sevinç Basad, Jan Karon and Anabel Schunke.
Recognition
- Axel-Springer-Prize for young journalists in the category Supraregional / National Contributions for his report from Afghanistan"You can kill us, but never defeat us", published in two parts on 12 and 13 October 2007 in Bild (2008).[23]
- The Golden Potato award (nomination for "particularly one-sided or unsuccessful reporting on aspects of the immigration society" (2018).[24] Reichelt attended the ceremony but turned down the award, stating that "the word 'potato'[25] has become an abuse of race and origin in elementary schools where migration is not a success story".[26]
Publications
- Reichelt, Julian (2010). Kriegsreporter ich will von den Menschen erzählen (in German). Köln: Fackelträger. ISBN 978-3-404-61669-5. OCLC 663506893.
- Reichelt, Julian; Meyer, Jan (2010). Ruhet in Frieden, Soldaten! wie Politik und Bundeswehr die Wahrheit über Afghanistan vertuschten (in German). Köln: Fackelträger. ISBN 978-3-7716-4466-6. OCLC 646132879.
References
- ↑ Nach neuen Erkenntnissen: Axel Springer entbindet Julian Reichelt von seinen Aufgaben www.axelspringer.com, retrieved 18 October 2021.
- ↑ "Julian Reichelt – Munzinger Biographie". www.munzinger.de. Retrieved 1 March 2023.
- ↑ "BILD-Chefreporter Julian Reichelt: Von Geschichten, die sein Leben veränderten". Bild. 27 February 2009.
- ↑ Susanne Herrmann (15 November 2018). "Brillantes Schülerinterview mit Bild-Chef Reichelt". Werben & Verkaufen.
- ↑ Reichelt hat bei der "Bild"-Gruppe künftig das letzte Wort. In: Süddeutsche Zeitung. 6 February 2017, retrieved 11 November 2017.
- ↑ Julian Reichelt, Reporter-Forum, retrieved 25 August 2014.
- ↑ Manfred Hart wird Chefredakteur für digitale Entwicklungsprojekte bei BILD/ Julian Reichelt übernimmt Chefredaktion von BILD.de. Archived 3 April 2014 at the Wayback Machine axelspringer.de, 19 November 2013.
- ↑ gia: Julian Reichelt wird Vorsitzender der Chefredaktionen. In: Spiegel Online, 6 February 2017, retrieved 11 April 2017.
- ↑ kue/dpa: "Bild"-Reporter von IS-Prozess ausgeschlossen. In: faz.net. 4 August 2008.
- ↑ Entscheidung des Beschwerdeausschusses 1 in der Beschwerdesache 0160/16/1-BA. In: Deutscher Presserat. 7 June 2016, retrieved 11 April 2017 (PDF).
- ↑ "Presserat weist Vorwürfe von Bild.de-Chef Reichelt zurück: "Geht in eine gesinnungspolitische Richtung" › Meedia". meedia.de. 17 June 2016.
- ↑ Alexander Kissler, Marc Felix Serrao (13 March 2021). "Böse, böser, "Bild"-Zeitung? Bei der Berichterstattung über den Chef von Deutschlands auflagenstärkster Zeitung setzen auch seriöse Medien auf feucht-fröhliche Spekulationen". Neue Zürcher Zeitung.
- ↑ Peter Weissenburger, Erica Zingher (19 March 2021). "Verfahren gegen "Bild"-Chef Reichelt: Viel größer als Julian". Die Tageszeitung.
- ↑ At Axel Springer, Politico's New Owner, Allegations of Sex, Lies and a Secret Payment, The New York Times, retrieved 17 October 2021.
- ↑ Hintergründe zur Entlassung Julian Reichelts als "Bild"-Chef, Tagesschau (ARD) auf Youtube, 19 October 2021.
- ↑ Wie der Ex-"Bild"-Chef seine Macht ausnutzte www.n-tv.de, 20 October 2021.
- ↑ At Axel Springer, Politico's New Owner, Allegations of Sex, Lies and a Secret Payment, The New York Times, 17 October 2021.
- ↑ Axel Springer removes a top editor after a Times report on workplace behavior, The New York Times, 18 October 2021.
- ↑ Weidemann, Axel; Hanfeld, Michael. "Bild-Chef Julian Reichelt: Sex, Lügen und ein achtkantiger Rauswurf". Faz.net.
- ↑ Wie das Ende eines Schurkenfilms Süddeutsche Zeitung, 20 October 2021.
- ↑ Nowak, Peter (24 February 2023). ""Achtung, Reichelt!" auf Youtube: Der schwarze Kanal". Die Tageszeitung: taz (in German). ISSN 0931-9085. Retrieved 27 September 2023.
- ↑ Gürgen, Malene (18 July 2023). "Rechtes Medienportal "Nius": Grundprinzip verdrehte Fakten". Die Tageszeitung: taz (in German). ISSN 0931-9085. Retrieved 27 September 2023.
- ↑ "Axel-Springer-Preis 2008: Preisträger Print". Archived from the original on 16 July 2014. Retrieved 23 February 2021.
- ↑ Ein Meister der Panik-Schlagzeile. In: Deutschlandfunk. 23 October 2018. Konstantina Vassilou-Enz im Gespräch mit Vladimir Balzer.
- ↑ "Kartoffel", Wiktionary, 20 October 2022, retrieved 8 November 2022
- ↑ #5 Traurige Kartoffeln – Reden wir über Rassismus?. In: Deutschlandfunk. 8 November 2018.