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''Se og Hør'' (See and Hear) is a TV guide and celebrity journalism magazine published in three independent versions in Denmark, Norway and Sweden (where it is called ''Se & Hör'') by the Danish company Aller Media. The Danish version is the oldest. The Danish and Swedish editions are published weekly, the Norwegian, the largest of the three, twice a week. It is the largest circulation illustrated weekly in all three countries; the Norwegian version has sometimes had the largest weekly circulation in Scandinavia. ==Denmark== ''Se og Hør'' first appeared in Denmark in 1939 as ''Det Ny Radioblad'' (The New Radio Magazine). In 1953 it began to cover the then new medium of television and changed its name to ''Se og Hør'', retaining the old name as a subtitle. ''Se og Hør'' is the largest illustrated weekly in Denmark, with average weekly sales of 133,325 in the first half of 2012.〔(Recorded statement of circulation ) at Dansk Oplagskontrol (pdf) 〕 In the 1980s and early 1990s, under former editor-in-chief Mogens E. Pedersen, it sold as many as 350,000 copies a week. Since November 2006, the magazine has awarded a journalism prize worth 150,000 kroner. In June 2009, Kim Henningsen became editor-in-chief at the Danish ''Se og Hør'', succeeding Henrik Qvortrup, who had left in November 2008 to become political editor at TV2.〔Kim Bretov, ("SE og HØR: Ny chefredaktør" ), ''Se og Hør'', 2 June 2009 〕 In April 2014, ''Se og Hør'' was involved in a media scandal when they were accused of using illegally leaked information about celebrities' credit card transactions and flight seat numbers. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Se og Hør」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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