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Pages in category "Weekly newspapers published in South Africa" The following 25 pages are in this category, out of 25 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
This is a list of newspapers in South Africa. In 2017, there were 22 daily and 25 weekly major urban newspapers in South Africa, mostly published in English or Afrikaans. [ 1 ] According to a survey of the South African Audience Research Foundation , about 50% of the South African adult population are newspaper readers and 48% are magazine ...
Die Son (Afrikaans: "The Sun") is a mixed Afrikaans-language South African tabloid reporting sensational news essentially after the model of British tabloids. It is the South African newspaper with the largest increase in readership in recent years. In the Western Cape province, it
Pages in category "Daily newspapers published in South Africa" The following 30 pages are in this category, out of 30 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
The Daily Sun was a tabloid daily newspaper in South Africa. [1] It had a circulation of more than 28,006 copies making it the second largest daily newspaper in the country to the Sunday Times in terms of largest circulation among all papers. [2] "Daily Sun" is based in Randburg, Johannesburg. It targets readers in and around the major urban ...
Homeless talk - a small newspaper produced in Johannesburg; its content is largely about the plight of the homeless; on sale at select shops and most traffic lights in Johannesburg [11] Internet [ edit ]
This was the forerunner of all community newspapers in South Africa. By 1978, Caxton were publishing the following newspapers either fortnightly, monthly or weekly: Sandton Chronicle , North Eastern Tribune , Northcliff and Blackheath Times , Randburg Sun , Southern Courier , Mayfair-Brixton , Newlands-Melville Telegraph , Rosebank Killarney ...
Deon du Plessis founded South Africa's largest tabloid, the Daily Sun in July 2002. While in management at the Independent News & Media, du Plessis proposed to the company the idea of a tabloid that would focus on the working class African reader in the township. He called his envisioned reader the 'man in the blue overalls'.