Arrêt sur images


Arrêt sur images was initially a weekly French television program, created and presented by journalist Daniel Schneidermann and broadcast on La Cinquième from 1995 to 2007 and produced by Carrere group. Funding for the show ceased in 2007 on Philippe Vilamitjana's decision.
After being taken off the air, Schneidermann created a website, @rrêt sur images. A provisional form of the web site was in place by September 2007, a more-definitive one was in place by January 2008. The internet subscription campaign launched on this occasion was a success, despite minimal mainstream media coverage.
From 2008 until 2014, Arrêt sur images chose to pay only 2.1% in VAT as the law imposes on the print press. In 2014 the French legislature voted that on-line sites would henceforth be indeed taxed at this rate, but the tax authority continued to demand six years back taxes at the higher rate of 19.7%. In the end, the National assembly voted to forgive the debt in December 2015.
Since 2008 a television channel, Arretsurimages.tv, which broadcasts the weekly debate led by Daniel Schneidermann, the literary program presented most often by Judith Bernard, the program @ux Sources by Maja Neskovic and a program on the television series and films launched in October 2012, @u prochain épisode, hosted by film columnist Rafik Djoumi. The team launched an iPhone application in early November 2009, an Android app in October 2010 and an application for tablet computers in December 2011. All these applications were developed by an @sinaute. They provide access to site content directly on compatible devices.

Media critique

"The principal vocation of @rrêt sur images is reflecting critically on media."

Notable guests

Notable guests on the program have included politician and former minister Jean-Pierre Chevènement, economist Frédéric Lordon, economist Jacques Sapir, Éric Coquerel, politician and former minister Jean-Luc Mélenchon, filmmaker François Ruffin, also editor-in-chief of Fakir, sociologist Pierre Bourdieu, former Charlie Hebdo satirist Luz. Schneidermann's guests are not always famous and have included secondary-school teachers, political anthropologists, union, and religious leaders.

The @si team