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Mama was established in 2003. [1] The magazine is part of Bonnier group and is published by Bonnier Tidskrifter AB 13 times a year. [2] The headquarters of the magazine is in Stockholm. [3] It targets mothers and offers articles on fashion, food, travel and interior design. [3]
Mama (Tagalog: Inay) is a 2024 Canadian documentary film, directed by Thea Loo. [1] The film profiles the phenomenon of Filipina women who came to Canada under the Live-In Caregiver Program to support their families, focusing in particular on its impact on their children who were left behind in the Philippines.
"Mama" is a song by the British girl group the Spice Girls. It was written by the Spice Girls, Matt Rowe and Richard Stannard , and produced by Rowe and Stannard for the group's debut album Spice , released in November 1996.
"Mama (Ana Ahabak)" [English: "Mother (I Love You)"] is a song by Austrian recording artist Christina Stürmer. Dealing with the 2003 invasion of Iraq , it was written by Robert Pfluger and Alexander Kahr for her debut studio album Freier Fall (2003), while production was helmed by the latter.
Stockholms-Tidningen (Swedish: The Stockholm Times) was a Swedish-language morning newspaper published in Stockholm, Sweden, between 1889 and 1984 with an interruption from 1966 to 1981. It was one of the major dailies in the country together with Dagens Nyheter and Aftonbladet in the 1960s.
Antonella Gambotto-Burke's first influential work of nonfiction about motherhood, Mama: Love, Motherhood and Revolution is an anthology of personal essays and interviews with some of the world's leading experts on family and childcare, [1] including Sheila Kitzinger, Steve Biddulph, Stephanie Coontz, Gabor Mate, and others.
Mama Turns 100 (Spanish: Mamá cumple cien años) is a 1979 Spanish comedy film written and directed by Carlos Saura. The film is a comedy sequel of the drama Ana and the Wolves directed by Saura in 1973. It was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film at the 52nd Academy Awards. [1] [2]
Big Mama Rag was part of the Liberation News Service. [5] One of the original funders of the newspaper was Denver's Aton Foundation. Big Mama Rag requested additional funds from the Denver Sustaining Fund, but was rejected. [6] The original collective were paid by an association of methodist women, but the grant eventually ran out. [1]