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After retaining, in the interim, the existing 8 p.m. and 9 p.m. newcasts, and a delay on its launch from January 15, in March 5, 1990, Disney implemented the concept of a prime time news block, with the three-hour long Prime 9 News airing from 8 to 11 pm. [61] A few years later in the early 1990s, KCAL added a short-lived half-hour newscast at ...
It is currently the most watched Spanish language network newscast in the United States, regularly beating its nearest rival, Telemundo's Noticiero Telemundo; it is also has some of the highest viewership among the key demographic of adults ages 18 to 49 among all evening news programs in the U.S., second only to NBC Nightly News, with a median ...
Regarding exports, although there has been a considerable increase in recent years, from €185 million in 2007 to €342 million in 2011, Spain's market share is small. However, in some sectors, the Spanish market share is high, such as ceramic products (21.2%), beverages (12.5%), mechanical devices (6.9%) or coloring materials and paint (5.5%).
Los Angeles news veterans Rudabeh Shahbazi and Kalyna Astrinos have been named anchors of the morning news franchise, launching in December. To compete in local news arms race, KCAL expands to 7 ...
With 3.8 million Los Angeles city residents, and Los Angeles County’s over 800,000 undocumented immigrants — by USC estimates — more concentrated in the City of Los Angeles, it’s likely ...
The former Nigeria's chairman of National Population Commission, Eze Duruiheoma, delivering Nigeria's statement in New York City on sustainable cities, human mobility and international migration in the 51st session of Commission on Population and Development, said that "Nigeria remains the most populous in Africa, the seventh globally with an ...
A single home in the rural southeastern U.S. stands at the center of a growing rift between Nielsen and the Spanish-language broadcasting giant whose audiences it measures.
La Opinión has diversified its coverage from purely Mexican to include the Central American, South American, Cuban, Puerto Rican and Spanish populations that have grown in Los Angeles over the last quarter century. It now includes reporting on issues relevant to a wide variety of Hispanics. In the words of former publisher Ignacio E. Lozano Jr.