Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Arab citizens of Israel Maariv: Evening: Hebrew Daily 11.8% (3.0%) 1948 Eli Azur Israeli Jews Al-Madina: The City: Arabic Weekly 2004 Rana Asali Arab citizens of Israel Makor Rishon: Primary Source: Hebrew Weekly 4.1% (0.2%) 1997 Sheldon Adelson: Religious Zionists: Novosti Nedeli: Weekly News: Russian Weekly 1989 Eli Azur: Russians in Israel ...
Maariv (Maariv Online, Maariv Ha'shavoa, Maariv La'noar), The Northern Radio, The Jerusalem Post, The Jerusalem Report, ECO99fm, Walla, Hamal, National Geographic Israel [13] [14] [15] Jewish Israeli Channel Ltd. Mirilashvili Yitzchak Mirilashvili: Channel 14 (Magazine 14), News 0404, Kol Chai [16] Right-wing, Likud leaning Yuval Sigler ...
The Times of Israel: news website in English, Arabic, French, Persian and Hebrew. Bokra, Israeli-Arab media website; Davar, Histadrut-affiliated news website. TLV1: English-language internet radio station. Walla!: Hebrew-language web portal. Ynet: Hebrew-language and English-language news website. Israel-Nachrichten: German-language online daily.
Nielsen, the king of media measurement, intends to extend its yardstick a little further. The data company, whose tabulation of TV audiences forms the bedrock of negotiations for billons of ...
Nielsen is taking a big step in measuring streaming TV today with the addition of Hulu and YouTube TV to its ratings. Nielsen's President of Product Leadership Megan Clarken said that the company ...
Ynet's main competition comes from Walla! Mako and Nana. Since 2008, Ynet is Israel's most popular internet portal, as measured by Google Trends. [4] In celebration of Israel's independence day in 2005, Ynet conducted a poll to determine whom Ynet readers consider to be the greatest Israelis of all time.
Nielsen, best known for delivering TV ratings, is getting ready for a future when it gauges a lot more than what people are watching on TV. The media-measurement giant plans to launch a new system ...
In 2015, Reuters correspondent Tova Cohen described Israeli society in 2012 as "news-obsessed." [5] Israel has a high newspaper readership rate, due to a combination of high literacy rate and a cultural interest in politics and current affairs. Average weekday readership of newspapers in Israel is around 21 papers per 100 people, although many ...