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Dinamani is a Tamil daily newspaper.The newspaper was established in 1933 and is owned by The New Indian Express Group. The first edition was published on 11 September. The printed circulation will be 1,244,568 as on Aug 2022 and 11,52,546 online subscribers.
Kerala, Chennai, Bangalore, Mumbai, New Delhi: 4.849 The Mathrubhumi Group 11 Eenadu: Telugu: Various cities and states 4.569 Ramoji Group: 12 Sakal: Marathi: Various cities in Maharashtra: 4.101 Sakal Media Group 13 Gujarat Samachar: Gujarati: 7 cities in Gujarat and in Mumbai and New York City: 3.265 Lok Prakashan Ltd. 14 Sakshi: Telugu
The language of Telugu is spoken in the Indian states of Andhra Pradesh and Telangana, in the southeast region of the country. The following are newspapers which are written primarily or entirely in the language.
Eenadu (Telugu: ఈనాడు; lit. ' Today/This Land ') [4] is the largest [5] circulated Telugu-language daily newspaper of India sold mostly in the states of Andhra Pradesh and Telangana. [6] It was founded by Ramoji Rao in 1974. [7] He remained Chief Editor until 2020. [2]
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The Indian Express is an English-language Indian daily newspaper founded in 1932 by Ramnath Goenka with an investment by capitalist partner Raja Mohan Prasad. The company is held in a trust by current legal heirs for Prasad's family as per the trust deed given by Goenka to Prasad.
99TV is an Indian free-to-air television channel that provides 24-hour news coverage in Telugu language. 99TV was founded in 2014 and is currently owned by New Waves Media headed by Thota Chandrasekhar, a former IAS officer. [1] [2] [3]
Vaartha was launched in 1996 [2] with A.B.K Prasad as its first editor. It claimed to be the first Telugu daily in Telangana and Andhra Pradesh to use Information Technology, [citation needed] allowing it to publish news that broke at as late as 4 a.m. Vaartha was initially popular, competing with Eenadu and Udayam.