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Informer is a Serbian tabloid newspaper based in Belgrade.It is known for its political bias in favor of the ruling Serbian Progressive Party (SNS) and its sensationalist stories.
Blic (Cyrillic: Блиц, [ˈbliːt͡s]) is a Serbian web portal covering politics, economy, entertainment, and current events. The first printed edition of Blic was published in 1996, its online portal was launched in 1998, and Blic TV began broadcasting in 2022.
A 7-minute short film to accompany the release of "Senza pensieri" was released onto YouTube on the same day. The video was directed by Rovazzi himself, and featured various Italian celebrities including Paolo Bonolis, Fabio Fazio, Loredana Bertè, J-Ax, Enrico Mentana, Terence Hill, Maccio Capatonda, Karen Kokeshi, Max Biaggi, Gigi Marzullo and Danti.
The paper was started on October 10, 2011, as the fourth Montenegrin daily newspaper (besides Pobjeda, Vijesti and Dan). [3] It was advertised as an "anti-fascist and anti-nationalistic" newspaper, as a newspaper which promotes "social justice, tolerance and diversity and fights against corruption".
La Stampa, based in Turin, [15] was published in broadsheet format, [16] until November 2006, when the paper began to be published in the Berliner format. [17] [18] [19] It launched a website in 1999. [6] La Stampa also launched a project, called Vatican Insider, run by the daily newspaper and has among its staff several Vatican affairs ...
Nedjeljom u dva (English: Sunday at Two) is a Croatian television talk show aired every Sunday afternoon at 14:00 CET on HRT 1 and hosted by Aleksandar Stanković. [1]The hour-long show usually features a single guest related to an important political, cultural or economic event that came to light recently.
2 52 United States 2014–15 Sprout: Flash Automatic Study Desk Wiki: 2 1100 South Korea 2014–21 [6] KBS2: CGI/Live action Bee and PuppyCat: 2 26 United States 2014–22 YouTube, VRV, Netflix: Traditional Biklonz: 5 111 South Korea 2014–16 [7] SBS: CGI Bing: 2 104: United Kingdom 2014–19 CBeebies: CGI Blaze and the Monster Machines: 7 139 ...
[2] RTCG is widely seen as dependent from the Government, [3] particularly after allegedly politically motivated dismissals of journalists in 2011. RTCG does not pay a broadcasting licence fee and is financed directly from the State budget (1,2% of the budget) as well as from advertising revenues (for a limited airtime) and sales revenues.