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Jornal de Negócios was started in 1997 as a finance website, being the first in the country. [1] In 1998 it became a business newspaper [1] and on 8 May 2003 it began to be published daily. [2] Jornal de Negócios is owned by Cofina [3] [4] and is based in Lisbon. [1] Its sister newspaper is Correio da Manhã, also owned by Cofina. [5] [self ...
Portuguese newspapers [2]; Newspaper Frequency Est. Headquarters Circulation [a] Owner Website National newspapers: A Bola: sports, daily: 1945: Lisbon — Ringier: abola.pt
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Sol was first published on 16 September 2006, [2] selling 120 thousand copies. In October 2014, Sol reached a weekly circulation of 22,345 copies, choosing shortly after to stop having its sales audited. The paper was founded by José António Saraiva with the premise to compete with the long-established Expresso.
January 22, 2025 at 2:04 PM. Big Three automaker Stellantis is making a number of US moves in response to the new Trump administration and its focus on building products in America.
In 1980 Expresso, in partnership with SDG – Simuladores e Modelos de Gestão – created the Global Management Challenge, a strategic management competition for university students. In 2014, Expresso was the recipient of the Meios and Publicidade award in the category of weekly generalist publication. [ 4 ]
The predecessor to Telejornal, Jornal de Actualidades, started its broadcast on 15 February 1957. [1] On 18 October 1959, Jornal de Actualidades was replaced by Telejornal with two editions, the main half-hour bulletin at 20:30, and a late edition before sign-off which was rarely broadcast after 23:30. The first presenters were Mário Pires and ...
In the period of 1995–1996 Diário de Notícias had a circulation of 63,000 copies slightly down on its 1880s circulation and below its peak as a propaganda newspaper for the Estado Novo in the 1930s (circulation of 120,000 in mainland Portugal and an additional 70,000 in its colonies), making it the seventh best-selling newspaper and third best selling daily newspaper in the country. [14]