People in the media:
Termination of his work as a political editor. She will continue to work with climate, energy and restructuring.
Geir Ramenfjell Dagbladet will leave, he himself assures journalists.
Ramenfjell has been working as political editor at the newspaper since 2016. Prior to that, he was cultural editor in the same place.
Now he ends his day at the newspaper where he has worked for 18 years, with concrete plans to continue working on climate, energy and restructuring. Without wanting to go into more detail about the plans now.
– It should be completely free
– It’s entirely my decision. I called management yesterday and said I would like to resign. This is not a position you can hold halfway through if you don’t have your head 100 percent in the task at hand, says Ramnefjell and adds:
– You must be completely free as a commentator, and when I have decided that I want to quit and move on to something else, I must also accept the consequences of that and leave Dagbladet.
Ramnefjell describes himself as having allowed himself to be sucked in by the climate, energy and restructuring of recent years.
– I have accumulated a fairly extensive specialized experience in this field, an area that will shape the development of society in the coming decades. I want to get into it and work on it. That’s what I feel passionate about, and want to spend my time with in the future.
Honoring the Dagbladet culture
He has only good words about his time and culture in Dagbladet, where he worked as a cultural journalist, news journalist, debate moderator, cultural editor and political editor.
For my part, my years at Dagbladet opened up tremendous opportunities, and gave me the opportunity to learn from some of the brightest media minds in the country. I’ve been able to sit in the morning meetings of the management department for over ten years and have had the opportunity to learn from some of the most brilliant analysts in Norway, so for me it’s been a great privilege to work at Dagbladet.
The newspaper went through ups and downs during his existence:
– This newspaper has taken many different turns, had victories and hard times. For my part, I still believe very much in Dagbladet. Dagbladet culture isn’t a myth, it’s about letting everyone in, lifting each other up, trusting all employees, and not using each other’s pointed elbows. A lot has happened over the years here, a lot has come and gone, but this culture is still there, and I have great faith that it will carry Dagbladet into many new good years, concludes Ramnefjell.
Messier 24 I reported the news for the first time.
FYI: Geir Ramnefjell was former news director Nils Martin Silvola at Dagbladet.
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