Aktuelle Kamera's main edition was initially scheduled at 20:00 before being moved to 19:30 in the 1960s, so as not to coincide with the major
West German newscasts,
ZDF's
heute at 19:00 and the
ARD's
Tagesschau at 20:00, both of which were widely watched in East Germany. The
broadcast lasted 20 minutes until 1972 when it was expanded to a full half-hour. set, made in East Germany in the 1950s-1960s. Starting in the mid-1970s, another 30-minute edition was presented on
DDR2 (launched on 3 October 1969) around 21:30. Prior to that, both channels aired
Aktuelle Kamera simultaneously at 19:30, then repeated the following day when DDR1
signed on around 9:30 (later 8:30), before airing school-oriented programming, co-produced by the DDR-FS and the GDR Education Ministry. News summaries were added as the transmissions increased during the day. There was a bulletin at the end of the morning programs (i.e. between 12:00 and 13:00) and another, the afternoon news update, at 17:00 on DDR1. DDR2's evening schedule always began with the news at 18:45 (later 17:45 and 18:55). Late newscasts did not appear until the 1970s when DDR1 screened a headline update following the magazine programs, around 22:00. From the 1980s, Aktuelle Kamera's final round-up was the last scheduled program at the end of the day. In fact, television audiences largely ignored
Aktuelle Kamera, preferring to watch West German newscasts, like the
ARD's Tagesschau. The East German authorities adopted the
French color standard
SECAM rather than the
PAL encoding used in the
Federal Republic of Germany. The basic
television standard remained the same. It did prevent reception
in color by native East German television sets though the majority of them were
monochrome (black and white) anyway. East Germans responded by buying
PAL decoders for their
SECAM television sets. Eventually, the government in
East Berlin stopped paying attention to so-called
Republikflucht via Fernsehen, or "
defection via television" and from 1977 onwards permitted the sale of dual standard (PAL/SECAM) sets; the SECAM standard stopped being used in East Germany after reunification, instead using PAL as it had been in the West.
Aktuelle Kamera served as an example for the Estonian newscast
Aktuaalne kaamera that was first aired in
Eesti Televisioon on 11 March 1956.
Aktuaalne Kaamera, even after several changes in format and Estonia restoring its independence, still airs as a daily newscast there today. ==Coverage during the last days of GDR==