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The Herald is a nationwide mid-market tabloid newspaper headquartered in Dublin, Ireland, and published by Independent News & Media who are a subsidiary of Mediahuis. [1] It is published Monday–Saturday. The newspaper was known as the Evening Herald until its name was changed in 2013. It is known for its vendors on the streets of Dublin. [2]
The Dublin Evening Mail – renamed the Evening Mail, closed in the 1960s; The Evening News – opened in May 1996 and closed in September of the same year; The Evening Press – closed in 1995; The Evening Telegraph – closed 1924; The Freeman's Journal – merged with the Irish Independent in 1924; Irish Bulletin – official Irish Republic ...
The Mail was bought by The Irish Times in its final few years. Having failed to turn the newspaper around, it had hoped to turn it into its own evening paper to rival the Irish Independent/Evening Herald and the Irish Press/Evening Press relationships, the Irish Times controversially closed the paper on 10 July 1962.
The tánaiste (Irish deputy prime minister) has said a fatal stabbing in Dublin city centre on Saturday was "alarming, shocking and deeply concerning". A man in his early 30s died after he was ...
The Evening Telegraph was for most of its existence Ireland's leading evening newspaper. It was published in Dublin between 1871 and 1924. Its main rivals were the widely read Dublin Evening Mail and the less widely read Evening Herald .
The Evening Press was an instant success, and contributed to the financial losses and eventual closure of the Evening Mail in 1962. The Evening Press heavily outsold the Evening Herald for most of its life also, particularly outside Dublin. It peaked at sales of 175,000 copies a day.
Today Tonight was broadcast from Monday to Thursday on RTÉ One after the main evening news and restored the station's reputation for current affairs broadcasting following the demise of 7 Days in 1976. [2] The last edition of the programme was broadcast on 27 August 1992 and was replaced by Prime Time. [3] It won a number of Jacob's Awards.
O'Doherty was born in Dublin, Ireland, at the Coombe Women & Infants University Hospital in November 1971. [1] His parents were both in their teens and he was the first of his mother's progeny. [ 1 ] His father, who had been living in London, opted to stay with his mother in Ireland and to marry her. [ 1 ]