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In 2006, La Opinión received the highest-ranking recognition in Spanish-language journalism, the José Ortega y Gasset Award from Spain’s El País newspaper. El País honored La Opinión for its pioneering trajectory over eighty years creating and maintaining an unprecedented media outlet for the growing Hispanic population in the United States.
La Opinión (Spanish: "The Opinion") is frequently used as a newspaper name in the Spanish-speaking world and in other countries. A partial list includes: A partial list includes: Argentina
The technical manager of La Opinión, Edgardo Sajón, was abducted on April 1, and La Opinión placed under Federal intervention. [8] Urged to leave the country by friends and family, Timerman refused, [ 3 ] and on April 15, he was abducted by a paramilitary group under the orders of Buenos Aires Province Police Chief Ramón Camps ; the ...
La Prensa de Minnesota: Minnesota Minneapolis El Puente Indiana [9] Goshen Que Pasa: North Carolina Charlotte 2002 La Raza: Illinois Chicago 1970 www.laraza.com: Rumbo: Massachusetts Lawrence 1996 Rumbo: Texas San Antonio, Houston, Austin, McAllen 2004 (no longer in print) El Sentinel: Florida Orlando El Sentinel del Sur de la Florida: Florida ...
Morning newscast Primero Noticias was replaced by three distinct programs: Las Noticias, an early round-up broadcast anchored by Danielle Dithurbide, Despierta, a longer-form, investigative journalism and opinion-focused broadcast anchored by Carlos Loret de Mola, and Al Aire, a lighter news magazine show with Paola Rojas.
The history of Noticias Telemundo traces back to 1987, when the network debuted its first news program Noticiero Telemundo-HBC, a program produced through an outsourcing agreement with the Miami-based Hispanic-American Broadcasting Corporation that was anchored by Lana Montalban; [3] following the program's cancellation, Montalban accepted an anchor position at the network's New York City ...
Diario las Américas was founded on July 4, 1953. It began as an evening newspaper with circulation from Tuesday to Sunday. Its closing time was noon because the copies were sent by air to different cities in the United States and Latin America where it was distributed to subscribers, government offices and diplomatic headquarters, in the early hours of the morning of the following day.
Other programs in Spanish were Las Noticias and Noticias México, all of them presented by the Colombian Patricia Janiot and the Uruguayan Jorge Gestoso, and with the direction of Rolando Santos. The following year, CNN en Español Radio was launched.