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The Mexican Press and Civil Society, 1940–1976: Stories from the Newsroom, Stories from the Street. US: University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 978-1-4696-3811-9. Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism, University of Oxford (2020), "Mexico", Digital News Report, UK, OCLC 854746354 {}: |author= has generic name ; in Spanish
La Jornada has presence in eight states of the Mexican Republic with local editions in Aguascalientes, Guerrero, Jalisco, Michoacán, Morelos, San Luis Potosí, Puebla and Veracruz (La Jornada de Oriente). As of 2006 it had approximately 287,000 readers in Mexico City, [1] and, according to them, their website has approximately 180,000 daily ...
(English translations of selected Spanish-language newspaper articles, 1855–1938). University of Miami; University of Florida. "Cuban Exile Newspapers at the University of Miami" – via Digital Library of the Caribbean. "Texas Cultures Online". The Portal to Texas History. "Spanish Language Press in New Orleans". Research Guides.
MEXICO CITY (Reuters) -Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador on Thursday named Lenia Batres as a new Supreme Court judge, after the lawmakers refused to approve one of his earlier ...
Noticieros Televisa, also branded as N+, is the news agency of Tritón Comunicaciones, which produces national and local news broadcasting bulletins for TelevisaUnivision's Mexican networks. It was headed by Leopoldo Gómez, vice president of Noticieros Televisa from 1998 to 2021; It was renamed as N+ in 2022 following the spin-off of the Grupo ...
La Prensa is a Mexican newspaper, owned by Organizacion Editorial Mexicana, established in 1928. The newspaper had a circulation of 244,299, [1] the highest circulation of any newspaper in Mexico, as of 2013. Their sister newspaper, ESTO once had the highest circulation of any Mexican newspaper with 400,000 copies.
On December 25, 2017, The New York Times published an article titled, «Using Billions in Government Cash, Mexico Controls News Media» [8] signaling El Universal as the largest beneficiary of government funds in the form of publicity and, consequently, transforming the newspaper into an attack dog for the government in power during the ...
The Mexican writer Elena Poniatowska remembers how her mother told her about her trust in the BBC: "We lived in México and she looked frenetically for news about the war because my father was at the frontline". The first Spanish service journalists remembered those times as really tough.