From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Tempo
Issue 1323 of Tempo from July 1991, depicting the EuroBasket 1991-winning Yugoslav national basketball team.
TypeSports magazine
Publisher Politika AD
Founded1966
Language Serbo-Croatian,
Serbian
Ceased publication2004
Headquarters Belgrade, Serbia

Tempo ( Serbian Cyrillic: Teмпo) was a Serbia-based magazine devoted to sports, published weekly.

Beginnings

Tempo was founded in Belgrade in 1966, as a weekly sports magazine under Politika's umbrella. [1] Most of its coverage centered on football, with basketball, handball, volleyball, and water polo also featuring prominently. For decades, Tempo was famous among the youth of SFR Yugoslavia for publishing glossy color posters of their favourite domestic and foreign sporting heroes.

With internet sporting sites and specialty TV sports channels gradually eating into its readership since the early 2000s, Tempo folded on July 7, 2004. It was the publication's 1879th issue and its cover featured the Greece national football team that had just won EURO 2004.[ citation needed]

Brief rebirth (2007–2009)

In 2007, Tempo 21 launched. One of the main theories as to why the 21 was added to their name was that it was meant to symbolize the magazine's rebirth in the 21st century. A new issue was released every other Wednesday, and was sold in Serbia the Serbian diaspora. In early 2009 ceased publication.[ citation needed]

References

  1. ^ History of Politika at Politika official website


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Tempo
Issue 1323 of Tempo from July 1991, depicting the EuroBasket 1991-winning Yugoslav national basketball team.
TypeSports magazine
Publisher Politika AD
Founded1966
Language Serbo-Croatian,
Serbian
Ceased publication2004
Headquarters Belgrade, Serbia

Tempo ( Serbian Cyrillic: Teмпo) was a Serbia-based magazine devoted to sports, published weekly.

Beginnings

Tempo was founded in Belgrade in 1966, as a weekly sports magazine under Politika's umbrella. [1] Most of its coverage centered on football, with basketball, handball, volleyball, and water polo also featuring prominently. For decades, Tempo was famous among the youth of SFR Yugoslavia for publishing glossy color posters of their favourite domestic and foreign sporting heroes.

With internet sporting sites and specialty TV sports channels gradually eating into its readership since the early 2000s, Tempo folded on July 7, 2004. It was the publication's 1879th issue and its cover featured the Greece national football team that had just won EURO 2004.[ citation needed]

Brief rebirth (2007–2009)

In 2007, Tempo 21 launched. One of the main theories as to why the 21 was added to their name was that it was meant to symbolize the magazine's rebirth in the 21st century. A new issue was released every other Wednesday, and was sold in Serbia the Serbian diaspora. In early 2009 ceased publication.[ citation needed]

References

  1. ^ History of Politika at Politika official website



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