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Bishopstown News [14] – Free monthly newspaper for the Western Suburbs (mainly Bishopstown and Wilton) of Cork City; The Carrigdhoun – Carrigaline and south-east Cork [15] Cork Independent – free Cork city- and county-based weekly newspaper; The Cork News – free Cork city based weekly newspaper, launched 18 September 2009 [16]
The paper is published weekly and contains local news, health and beauty, business, opinion, social events, entertainment, motoring and property as well as input from a number of columnists. [ 2 ] The Cork Independent is published by the IFN Group, which previously published the Galway Independent until the Galway Independent went into ...
The Echo, formerly known as the Evening Echo, [3] is an Irish morning newspaper based in Cork. It is distributed throughout the province of Munster, although it is primarily read in its base city of Cork. The newspaper was founded as a broadsheet in 1892, [2] and has been published in tabloid format since 1991.
Sinéad Sheppard is an Irish politician and dancing tutor, and former member of the pop group Six.She rose to fame in the 2001–2002 RTÉ One television series Popstars, in which she was selected as a member of the group.
Shaykh Dr. Umar Al-Qadri of the Islamic Center of Ireland said O'Connor had “brought diverse souls together through her art” as he "bid farewell to a remarkable soul who touched us all.”
While TCH's other major newspaper titles, the Irish Examiner and Evening Echo, are based in Cork, the Post is published in Dublin. The paper describes itself as "Ireland's Political, Economic and Financial Newspaper". It is a general newspaper with a strong emphasis on commerce, politics and financial markets.
The Cork Advertiser, which was published from 1799 to 1824, called itself the Cork Constitution in 1823. The Cork Morning Post, which started publication in 1822 and ceased in 1924 renamed itself the Cork Constitution in 1873. In 1892, the newspaper's staff founded the rugby club of the same name, which still exists.
On 31 December 1961 Ireland's first national television station, Telefís Éireann, was officially launched.A new Television Complex was built at Donnybrook in Dublin and the news service was the first to move in. Charles Mitchel read the first television news bulletin at 18:00 on 1 January 1962.