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La Presse is published on its website, lapresse.ca, and its mobile app, La Presse Mobile.The newspaper targets an educated, middle-class readership. Its main competitors are two Montreal print dailies, the tabloid-format Le Journal de Montréal, which aims at a more populist audience, and the more left-leaning broadsheet Le Devoir.
Le Journal de Montréal is a daily French-language tabloid newspaper published in Montreal, Quebec, Canada.It has the largest circulation of any newspaper in Quebec and is also the largest French-language daily newspaper in North America. [2]
La Presse is published on its website, lapresse.ca, and its mobile app, La Presse Mobile. The newspaper targets an educated, middle-class readership. Its main competitors are two Montreal print dailies, the tabloid-format Le Journal de Montréal, which aims at a more populist audience, and the more left-leaning broadsheet Le Devoir.
Le Devoir (independent) Le Droit – produced in Ottawa, but also distributed in Gatineau and elsewhere in Outaouais; La Presse (independent) online-only since 2018; Le Soleil (Quebec) La Tribune (Sherbrooke) La Voix de l'Est (Granby) Le Nouvelliste (Trois-Rivières) Le Quotidien (Saguenay) Le Journal de Montréal
The Gazette is one of the three dailies published in Montreal, the other two being French-language newspapers: Le Journal de Montréal and Le Devoir. (La Presse is only published digitally since 2018.) In recent years, The Gazette has stepped up efforts to reach bilingual francophone professionals and adjusted its coverage accordingly. The ...
Le Journal de Montréal; Le Journal de Québec; M. Métro (Montreal newspaper) La Minerve; ... La Patrie (Canadian newspaper) Photo Journal; La Presse; Q. Le ...
Le Devoir headquarters have been located in Montreal at 71A rue Saint-Jacques from 1910 to 1914; at 443 rue Saint-Vincent in Old Montreal from 1914 to 1924; at 430 rue Notre-Dame East from 1924 to 1972; at 211 rue du Saint-Sacrement from 1972 to 1992, at 2050 rue de Bleury from 1992 to 2016; before moving to 1265 rue Berri on December 11, 2016. [9]
The Montreal buildings belonging to CBC/Radio-Canada, TVA, La Presse and Le Journal de Montréal. Montreal has a large and well-developed communications system, including several English and French language television stations, newspapers, radio stations, and magazines. It is Canada's second-largest media market, and the centre of francophone ...