- Matija Babić
-
Matija Babić (born 1978) is a Croatian tabloid journalist and enterpreneur best known for his pioneering use of Internet in Croatian media.
As a student of University of Zagreb's Faculty of Political Sciences Babić began his career in the media in the late 1990s when he launched political news websites Vlast.net and Izbori.net. This caught attention of Globalnet, one of the pioneering Croatian ISPs, who hired him as editor of their web portal Online.hr. Although the portal managed to attract more readership during his tenure, the portal's parent company decided to cease funding the portal in late 2001 and in December 2002 Babić left Online.hr to found Index.hr, one of the first Croatian Internet-only news outlets.[1]
Initially designed as a news aggregator, Index.hr provided news content from Croatia, Serbia and Bosnia and Herzegovina. The website quickly gained popularity in the early 2000s and over time more original content produced by the growing staff was being added to the site, until it became a popular media outlet in its own right. Around the same time the website gained a reputation for yellow journalism after exposing a series of scandals, the two most notable being the 2003 controversy stirred by a discovered recording of popular singer Marko Perković in which Perković publicly performed a song praising the WWII fascist Ustaše regime,[2] and the 2004 celebrity sex tape scandal involving Severina Vučković, a pop singer.[3] Babić's website was sued by Vučković for copyright infringement and breach of privacy, but the lawsuit was later dismissed by a Zagreb district court in July 2004.[4]
On account of the website's success, the Austrian-based media concern Styria Medien AG (who owned Večernji list, one of the most widely circulated daily newspapers in the country) had hired Babić as editor-in-chief of 24sata, a new tabloid newspaper which was intended to target "young, urban and modern" readers.[5] Babić left Index.hr and joined 24sata which was launched in March 2005 and soon established itself as Croatia's third daily newspaper in terms of circulation, behind Jutarnji list and Večernji list. However, it was also criticized for sensationalism and poor quality of writing, and Babić was sacked only four months later in July 2005, following an issue which featured a cover page with then Prime Minister Ivo Sanader and the headline "Everybody Hates Sanader".[6] Babić then returned to Index.hr and continued to run the website, currently holding the title of "author and editor of the project".[7]
References
- ^ "Nismo više kmetovi" (in Croatian). Internet Monitor. 9 December 2002. http://www.monitor.hr/interview/matija_babic.htm. Retrieved 13 September 2011.
- ^ "Reakcije medija na slučaj Thompson" (in Croatian). Index.hr. 31 December 2003. http://www.index.hr/vijesti/clanak/reakcije-medija-na-slucaj-thompson/178641.aspx. Retrieved 13 September 2011.
- ^ Boršić, Zrinka (13 November 2004). "Neshvaćena duhovitost i prikrivene suze" (in Croatian). Vjesnik. http://www.vjesnik.hr/html/2004/11/13/Clanak.asp?r=sss&c=1. Retrieved 11 March 2010.
- ^ "Odbačena Severinina kaznena prijava" (in Croatian). Sarajevo-X.com. 1 July 2004. http://www.sarajevo-x.com/lifestyle/clanak/040701001. Retrieved 13 September 2011.
- ^ Skender, Melisa (12 April 2005). "Matija Babić - tvorac prvog hrvatskog dnevnog tabloida" (in Croatian). Nacional. http://www.nacional.hr/clanak/14151/matija-babic-tvorac-prvog-hrvatskog-dnevnog-tabloida. Retrieved 13 September 2011.
- ^ "Matija Babić više nije urednik 24sata" (in Croatian). Index.hr. 5 July 2005. http://www.index.hr/vijesti/clanak/matija-babic-vise-nije-urednik-24sata/273224.aspx. Retrieved 13 September 2011.
- ^ "Index.hr - Impressum" (in Croatian). Index.hr. http://www.index.hr/index/default.aspx?id=2. Retrieved 13 September 2011.
Categories:- 1978 births
- People from Zagreb
- Living people
- Croatian journalists
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.