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Barbara Karlich (born 7 January 1969, in Vienna) is an Austrian television presenter, journalist and publicist.
Barbara Karlich is the daughter of the entrepreneur Viktor Karlich and the librarian Katharina Karlich. She grew up in Trausdorf in Burgenland and belongs to the Burgenland-Croat minority. She graduated from the Eisenstadt high school in 1987. Karlich studied journalism, psychology and theater studies at the University of Vienna and completed his studies in journalism. She also attended the university course in public relations. [1] [2]
In 1999 Karlich was brought to ORF television by the director Kathrin Zechner, where she has been hosting her weekdays show since 27 October 1999. The Barbara Karlich Show on ORF2 is the only remaining talk show on German-language television and thus holds the record of the longest-broadcast talk shows (since October 1999) in Germany, Switzerland and Austria. In the summer of 2001 she led through the reality documentary Wie das Leben so spielt (How life so plays), which showed people in special and moving moments in their lives. [3]
Österreichischer Rundfunk is an Austrian national public broadcaster. Funded from a combination of television licence fee revenue and limited on-air advertising, ORF is the dominant player in the Austrian broadcast media. Austria was the last country in continental Europe after Albania to allow nationwide private television broadcasting, although commercial TV channels from neighbouring Germany have been present in Austria on pay-TV and via terrestrial overspill since the 1980s.
Thomas C. Brezina is an Austrian writer of children's books and TV-Presenter. He is especially known for his series, The Knickerbocker Gang, A Case for You and the Tiger-Team and his stories about the talking bike Tom Turbo, as well as for hosting the children's television series Am Dam Des. He has published over 550 books and his work has been translated into 35 languages.
Mirjam Weichselbraun is an Austrian television host and actress, best known in Austria for presenting Dancing Stars, Life Ball and the Vienna Opera Ball. She is best known, outside Austria and Germany, for co-presenting the Eurovision Song Contest in 2015.
Cosima Arabella-Asereba Kiesbauer, known professionally as Arabella Kiesbauer, is an Austrian born German-Austrian TV presenter, writer and actress. She grew up in Vienna with her grandmother after her mother Hannelore and her father Sammy Ammissah separated.
Karin Schäfer is a performance artist and the head of the Karin Schäfer Figuren Theater - Visual Theatre Productions company. After studying puppetry arts with Harry V. Tozer at Barcelona's Instituto del Teatro and working in Spain for several years, she returned to Austria in 1993.
Neighbourly relations exist between Austria and Hungary, two member states of the European Union. Both countries have a long common history since the ruling dynasty of Austria, the Habsburgs, inherited the Hungarian throne in the 16th century. Both were part of the now-defunct Austro-Hungarian Empire from 1867 to 1918. The two countries established diplomatic relations in 1921, after their separation.
The ORF regional studios are branch offices from ORF in each state of Austria. Since 1975 there is also a regional office in and since 2021 a broadcasting TV studio in Bolzano for the German-speaking population of South Tyrol, Italy.
Helene Maimann is an Austrian historian, writer, filmmaker and exhibition organizer. She won an Axel Corti Prize, and Käthe Leichter Prize.
Danielle Spera is an Austrian journalist, writer, and a former director of the Jewish Museum Vienna.
Stermann & Grissemann are an Austrian German comedy duo comprising Dirk Stermann and Christoph Grissemann.
The Social Democratic Party of Austria is a social-democratic political party in Austria. Founded in 1889 as the Social Democratic Workers' Party of Austria and later known as the Socialist Party of Austria from 1945 until 1991, the party is the oldest extant political party in Austria. Along with the Austrian People's Party (ÖVP), it is one of the country's two traditional major parties. It is positioned on the centre-left on the political spectrum.
Hellmut Andics was an Austrian journalist, publicist and writer.
Nadja Maleh is an Austrian actress, singer, cabaret artist and director.
Stefan Geosits was a Burgenland Croatian Catholic priest in Austria, who worked as a lay theatre manager and director, translator, writer and historian.
Hanni Rützler is an Austrian nutritional scientist, food trends researcher, author and health psychologist.
Kristina Inhof is an Austrian television presenter and sports journalist at ORF.
Theodor "Theo" Öhlinger is an Austrian constitutional scholar and educator. Öhlinger was a member the Austrian Constitutional Court from 1977 to 1989 and a professor of constitutional and administrative law at the University of Vienna from 1974 to 2007. Since 1999, he has been serving as the deputy chairman of the board of trustees of the Vienna Museum of Art History. Öhlinger has published 23 books and more than 350 scholarly articles and appears as a frequent commentator on legal issues in the Austrian news media. Austrian President Alexander van der Bellen called him Austria's "operating system" during the turbulent times of May 2019.
Andrea Fraunschiel was an Austrian politician who was a member of the Federal Council of Austria, member of the Landtag of Burgenland, and mayor of Eisenstadt.
Siglinde Bolbecher was an Austrian historian, exile researcher and poet.
Ruth Grützbauch is an Austrian astronomer, planetarium director and science communicator. After earning her doctoral degree in 2007, she conducted extragalactic research until 2013, and worked as an educator and science communicator afterwards. Since 2017, she runs the Public Space pop-up planetarium.