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Paul Amar; Adolphe Amouroux; Rachid Arhab; Marie-Laure Augry; Francois Bachy; Philippe Baqué; Dominique Baudis; Jacqueline Baudrier; Daniel Bilalian; Jacqueline Caurat
Goldstein, Robert Justin. "Fighting French Censorship, 1815-1881." French Review (1998): 785–796. in JSTOR; Gough, Hugh. The newspaper press in the French Revolution (Taylor & Francis, 1988) Isser, Natalie. The Second Empire and the Press: A Study of Government-Inspired Brochures on French Foreign Policy in Their Propaganda Milieu (Springer ...
All employees, including management, received the same salary. In addition to traditional editor's notes, known as Note de la rédaction and marked as N.D.L.R., it included the innovative NDLC (note de la claviste), apt and witty comments inserted at the last moment by the typesetter. [8] It was the first French daily to have a website.
In 1974, De Telegraaf moved to a new location on the Basisweg. In 1995–1996 De Telegraaf had a circulation of 760,000 copies, making it the best-selling paper in the country. [3] De Courant/Nieuws van de Dag ceased publication in 1998. In 1999, the circulation of the paper was 808,000 copies, making it the ninth best-selling European newspaper.
Its counterpart in the French Community is the French-language RTBF (Radio-télévision belge de la Communauté française), and in the German-speaking Community it is BRF (Belgischer Rundfunk). The VRT operates six television channels ( VRT 1 , VRT Canvas , Ketnet , Sporza , VRT NWS and VRT MAX ) together with a number of radio channels ...
View a machine-translated version of the French article. Machine translation, like DeepL or Google Translate , is a useful starting point for translations, but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate, rather than simply copy-pasting machine-translated text into the English Wikipedia.
Le Figaro was founded as a satirical weekly in 1826, [12] [13] taking its name and motto from Le Mariage de Figaro, the 1778 play by Pierre Beaumarchais that poked fun at privilege. Its motto, from Figaro's monologue in the play's final act, is " Sans la liberté de blâmer, il n'est point d'éloge flatteur " ("Without the freedom to criticise ...
The French 20 minutes was launched in Paris on 15 March 2002, and spread to 11 other urban areas of France, including, in order of size, the cities of Marseille, Lyon, Toulouse, Nice, Nantes, Strasbourg, Montpellier, Bordeaux, Lille, Rennes and Grenoble. Each edition includes both national pages and regional sections.