Broadcasting in East Germany was owned by the state, and was under its tight control and censorship.
Broadcasting's governing body in East Germany was the Staatliches Komitee für Rundfunk (the National Committee for Broadcasting), a government department directly controlled by the Central Committee of the Socialist Unity Party of Germany government and modelled after the Soviet Union's broadcasting system.
The committee controlled two overall organisations - Rundfunk der DDR for radio and Deutscher Fernsehfunk (later Fernsehen der DDR) for television.
On 13 May 1945, the Soviet occupying forces in Berlin began a radio broadcasting service to the people of Berlin called Berliner Rundfunk, operating from what would become the British sector of West Berlin. The station was controlled by Walter Ulbricht.
As the four occupying sectors in Berlin were established, the American zone gained the station Rundfunk im amerikanischen Sektor (RIAS), whilst the British established Nordwestdeutscher Rundfunk (NWDR) which also broadcast in their zone.
In 1948, control of the NWDR was transferred to the provisional government in West Germany, whilst RIAS remained American-controlled.
On 15 September 1952, the Soviet occupying forces formally transferred control of broadcasting in the east to the GDR.
After the building of the Berlin Wall, the GDR began an aggressive programme to attempt to prevent its citizens listening to broadcasts from RIAS and the western ARD. The Freie Deutsche Jugend (Free German Youth), the official young persons' movement in the GDR, started the campaign "Blitz contra Natosender" - "Lightning against NATO's transmitters" - to encourage young people to remove or turn away aerials pointing at the west.
The GDR also instituted a programme of jamming foreign signals, both shortwave broadcasts from international broadcasters like the BBC and local broadcasts from RIAS. A network of jamming stations was built covering the entire country. Although attempts to jam RIAS were soon abandoned as it was found to be impossible to do so effectively without also disrupting reception within West Germany something which was outlawed by treaty and ran the risk of counter-jamming of East German stations.
Nevertheless, people continued to listen (or attempt to listen) to RIAS and ARD broadcasts. In 1980, a further attempt was made to distract people - especially the young - from western broadcasts by launching a youth radio station, DT64.
The Länder introduced two new public broadcasters (Ostdeutscher Rundfunk Brandenburg in the east and Mitteldeutscher Rundfunk in the south) and extended two existing public broadcasters (Norddeutscher Rundfunk from the north of the Federal Republic to the north of the whole country, and Sender Freies Berlin from West Berlin to the entire city).
In 1994, RIAS merged with the GDR's Deutschlandsender Kultur to become DeutschlandRadio Berlin, which later became Deutschlandradio Kultur.
| Year: | 1965 | 1970 | 1975 | 1980 | 1985 | 1988 | 1989 |
| Spoken word | 32217 | 36866 | 32479 | 35435 | 38221 | 46033 | 48428 |
| Music | 31499 | 31131 | 29706 | 31583 | 33804 | 48112 | 48953 |
| Total | 63716 | 67997 | 62185 | 67018 | 72025 | 94145 | 97381 |
| Hours per week | 1222 | 1304 | 1193 | 1282 | 1381 | 1800 | 1868 |
At Soviet military barracks, Programme 1 of Soviet television was transmitted on low power for the soldiers, in a similar way to the highly localised broadcasts of AFN, SSVC, CFN and the French FFB in the west. The last Russian transmitter was closed in 1994.
In Germany, the situation was different as East and West Germany were in competition over available frequencies for broadcasts and for viewers across the Iron Curtain.
The West German Nordwestdeutsche Rundfunk (NWDR) had made early plans to begin television broadcasts in its area, which originally included West Berlin. The first western test broadcasts were made in 1950.
The GDR authorities therefore also made an early start on television, beginning the building of a television centre in Adlershof on 11 June 1950. The GDR television service began experimental test broadcasts on 20 December 1951.
The NWDR announced plans to begin a regular television service from Hamburg starting from Christmas 1952. This spurred the eastern authorities into further action.
A relay transmitter in the centre of Berlin was built in February 1952 and connected to Aldershof on 3 June. On 16 November, the first television sets were made available to the public at 3500 Ostmarks each.
Continuity announcer Margit Schaumäker welcomed viewers at 20:00 and introduced the station's logo - the Brandenburg Gate. Speeches by senior figures in the television organisation followed, then the first edition of the East German national news programme, Aktuelle Kamera, presented by Herbert Köfer.
Party policy in East Germany was to censor the "mass media". As television had a limited audience, it was not classed as a mass medium and therefore Aktuelle Kamera was, at first, uncensored and even critical. This situation changed after the television service reported accurately on the uprising in East Germany on 17 June 1953. The director was removed and news was then sourced from official outlets.
Technology and TV studios also extended quickly. In the summer of 1953, Studio I was opened at Adlershof. In 1955 the first mobile transmission unit and a third broadcasting studio were added to the system.
On 2 January 1956 the "official test program" of the television centre in Berlin ended, and on 3 January the national Deutsche Fernsehfunk (German Television Broadcasting - DFF) began transmitting.
The new television service was deliberately not called "GDR Television", as the intention was to provide an all-Germany service. However, the geography of Germany prevented this - despite placing high-power transmitters in border areas, the GDR could not penetrate the whole of West Germany; whilst West German broadcasts easily reached most of East Germany except for the extreme south-east (most notably Dresden, the area being in a deep valley, leading to its old East German nickname of Tal der Ahnungslosen, or Valley of the Clueless) and the extreme north-east (around Rügen, Greifswald, Neubrandenburg and beyond)
By the end of 1958, there were over 300,000 television sets in the GDR.
The West version was discontinued by the ARD on reunification; however, stations in the former GDR continued to play clips from the East's Sandman every night. The character plays an important background role in the popular 2003 tragicomedy film Good bye, Lenin!, symbolising the feelings of loss of the main character played by Daniel Brühl.
The introduction of DFF2 marked an increase in the hours of broadcasting overall.
| Year | 1955 | 1960 | 1965 | 1970 | 1975 | 1980 | 1985 | 1988 | 1989 |
| Hours broadcast per year | 786 | 3007 | 3774 | 6028 | 6851 | 7704 | 8265 | 9194 | 8900 |
| Hours broadcast per week | 15 | 58 | 73 | 116 | 132 | 148 | 159 | 177 | 171 |
DDR-FS therefore wished to present colour pictures of the games to West Germany, which was part of the boycott, and a programme of experimental transmissions in PAL was instituted (whilst dual standard sets were the norm in the East in order to watch West programmes, the West population had little inclination to buy dual standard sets to watch East programmes). However, little came of these experiments.
However, the plan was not successful as the GDR itself began to dissolve under economic and popular political pressure brought about by the reforms in Moscow under Mikhail Gorbachev.
At first, DDR-FS stuck to the party line and barely reported the mass protests in the country. However, when Erich Honecker and Politburo resigned on 18 October 1989 and the rule of the Communist party began to breakdown, DDR-FS reformed their programmes to remove propaganda and report news freely.
The main propaganda programme, Der schwarze Kanal (The Black Channels) - a retelling of the West German news programmes with an "explanatory" commentary informing viewers of the "real" stories and meanings behind the pictures and generally criticising Western media (Particularly ARD and ZDF) - stopped on 30 October.
When the borders opened on 9 November, the main news programme on DDR2 began to show stories and pictures from the West German 3sat channel, sidestepping the remaining censorship. . DDR-FS joined the 3sat consortium in February 1990.
At this point, DDR-FS became almost completely separate from the state apparatus, starting a number of new programme strands, including a free and open debate programme on Thursdays, complete with critical phone-in contributions from viewers. At first this had to be handled very carefully, as the Stasi - the state secret police - were still operating and had an office in the studios.
In February 1990, the Volkskammer passed a media resolution defining DDR-FS as a politically independent public broadcasting system. A law passed by the Volkskammer in September 1990 made this a requirement.
On 4 March 1990, emphasising the change and reflecting the forthcoming reunification, DDR1 and DDR2 were renamed back to DFF1 and DFF2.
With reunification approaching, the former Länder (Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, Brandenburg, Sachsen, Sachsen-Anhalt and Thüringen) that had been abolished in 1952 were resurrected and regional broadcasting was slowly reintroduced.
Article 36 of the accession agreement that governed reunification required that DFF must be dissolved by 31 December 1991 and that the former West system be extended to replace it.
On 15 December 1990, the ARD's Das Erste channel took over the frequencies of DFF1. Das Erste had regional opt-outs during the first part of the evening, but the former East did not have ARD broadcasters to fill these spaces. Therefore, until 31 December 1991, DFF1 continued to provide programmes in these slots:
Employees of the DFF were worried about job prospects in the new broadcasters and also had a loyalty to the DFF. Viewers, accustomed to the DFF's programming, were concerned at the loss of favourite shows and the choice most viewers had had between West and East channels.
The new Länder considered keeping a form of DFF running as the equivalent to the ARD members' "third programme" in other regions. However, political opinion was against centralisation and in favour of the new devolved system brought in from the west.
Sachsen, Sachsen-Anhalt and Thüringen agreed to pool their broadcasts into Mitteldeutscher Rundfunk (MDR), an ARD member broadcaster based in Leipzig.
Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, Brandenburg and Berlin considered pooling their broadcasts into Nordostdeutschen Rundfunkanstalt - Northeast German Broadcasting (NORA). Another alternative was for Brandenburg and Berlin to consolidate and for Mecklenburg-Vorpommern to have its own broadcaster.
No agreement could be reached between the three Länder; Mecklenburg therefore joined the existing Norddeutscher Rundfunk (NDR), whilst the existing Sender Freies Berlin (SFB) expanded to the whole of the city and a new broadcaster, Ostdeutscher Rundfunk Brandenburg (ORB) was launched for Brandenburg.
The new organisations began transmissions on 1 January 1992.
Also produced was "ESP" Einführung in die sozialistische Produktion - "An introduction to Socialist production" and an English-learners course, English for You.
Many of these programmes are archived and are available from the DRA in Babelsberg.
With reunification, it was decided to switch to the PAL colour system. The system was changed between the end of DFF programmes on 14 December 1990 and the opening of ARD programmes on 15 December. The transmission authorities made the (not incorrect) assumption that most East Germans had either dual standard or monochrome sets; those who did not could purchase decoders.
In 1983 DDR-FS also pioneered the use of Steadicam equipment for live reporting.
In addition, broadcasting was heavily subsidised by the state. For example, in 1982, 115.4 million Ostmarks was made through licence fees, whilst expenditure in 1983 for the television service alone was 222million Ostmarks.
With the end of the Communist system, spot advertising was introduced to DFF in order to better cover the system's cost. The French advertising agency Information et Publicité was engaged to produce and sell commercials and airtime on the DFF networks.
The following are the sources for that article and are, therefore, in German.
East Germany | German radio | German television networks | East German television | Censorship
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It uses material from the
"Broadcasting in East Germany".
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