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The Gulf Today (Dubai) Khaleej Times (India, Dubai) The Filipino Times (Abu Dhabi and Dubai) The Brew News (Ajman) The National (Abu Dhabi) Sport360 (Abu Dhabi) XPRESS (Dubai) Latin & Gulf (Dubai) With the advent of online media, most of the traditional print newspapers have been severely affected. Revenues of the large groups like Gulf News ...
In recent years the term "classified advertising" or "classified ads" has expanded from merely the sense of print advertisements in periodicals to include similar types of advertising on computer services, radio, and even television, particularly cable television but occasionally broadcast television as well, with the latter occurring typically ...
Gulf News is a daily English language newspaper published from Dubai, United Arab Emirates. First launched in 1978, it is distributed throughout the UAE and also in other Persian Gulf countries . Its online edition was launched in 1996.
The AOL.com video experience serves up the best video content from AOL and around the web, ... The 15 best Valentine's movies to stream if you're feeling the love. Commerce. See All.
Sport360 (Dubai) Dubai.News (Dubai) XPRESS (Dubai) Arabic language. Al Khaleej (Sharjah) Akhbar Al Arab (Abu Dhabi) Al Bayan (Dubai) Al Fajr (Abu Dhabi) Al-Ittihad (Al Waseet) (Abu Dhabi) Emarat Al Youm (Dubai) Araa News (Ajman) English-Filipino language. The Filipino Times (Abu Dhabi/Dubai) Malayalam . Gulf Madhyamam Daily (Dubai) Middle East ...
An online influencer has been arrested in Dubai over a satirical TikTok video in which he portrays a brash Emirati on a spending spree inside a luxury car showroom. The comedic sketch, in which he ...
MBC Group operates over 19 free-to-air satellite TV channels, and a video-on-demand service . MBC 1 was the first broadcaster to provide a satellite-based, free-to-air 24-hour television broadcasting network across the Arab world. The Group's current chairman is Sam Barnett. [7]
In 2011, the United Arab Emirates was the main headquarters to 72 free-to-air channels, falling slightly behind Egypt and Saudi Arabia in terms of the total number of channels within the Arab world. The United Arab Emirates also had 16 terrestrial channels, of which 13 are state-owned. [1]