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In 2015, Mário Ramires merged the newsrooms of the newspaper i and do Sol, remaining director and owner of both publications through Newsplex, a company of which he is the sole administrator. [ 6 ] Sol competes directly with another Portuguese weekly, Expresso, from the Impresa group, which holds the undisputed leadership in this segment, and ...
O jornalismo portuguez (in Portuguese). Typographia Soares. Warren Agee and Nelson Traquina (1983). O Quarto Poder Frustrado [Mass Media in the Post-Revolutionary Portugal] (in Portuguese). Lisbon: Vega. Gina Guedes Rafael; Manuela Santos, eds. (2001). Jornais e Revistas Portugueses do Século XIX (in Portuguese). Biblioteca Nacional. ISBN 972 ...
The paper is the longest established English-language newspaper in publication in Portugal. It is politically neutral and carries current comment on the latest political developments each week. News on a local and national level is carried from throughout Portugal, with the aim of keeping expatriate residents and visitors fully informed about ...
The 62-year-old Costa, Portugal’s Socialist leader since 2015, asserted his innocence but said in a nationally televised address that “in these circumstances, obviously, I have presented my ...
In 2007 the daily was the best-selling newspaper in Portugal with a circulation of 115,000 copies. [15] Its 2008 circulation rose to 122,090 copies. [16] In 2009 it was also the best-selling newspaper in the country. [17] Between September and October 2013 Correio da Manhã had a circulation of 116,821 copies. [5]
The resignation of Portugal's prime minister will trigger instability that could delay economic reforms, while making it harder for the country to keep a balanced budget and further reduce debt ...
In Portugal, it is distributed in Lisbon, Porto and Coimbra, and also other Portuguese cities. In Brazil, it was distributed in São Paulo , Rio de Janeiro , Brasília , Campinas and Recife . It is the first free newspaper in Portugal (excluding some local publications, such as free university student journals), prior to the Portuguese edition ...
The newspaper is part of the Portuguese company Impresa, [9] [10] which also controls various magazines, including Caras and Visão, among others. [11] Expresso was published in broadsheet format [12] until September 2006 when it switched to Berliner format. [13] [14] It is the first Portuguese paper to be published in Berliner format. [13]