Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Milenio is a major national newspaper in Mexico, owned by Grupo Multimedios.. It is published in 11 cities across Mexico, including Monterrey, Mexico City, Guadalajara, León, Pachuca, Puebla, Villahermosa, Tampico, Torreón, Toluca, and Xalapa.
Milenio Televisión is a Mexican television cable news channel owned by Grupo Multimedios. The news programming uses the resources of the Milenio newspaper, one of the largest in the country. Programming is 24 hours a day, through news, analysis and specialized programs.
Diario de México [1] Daily El Diario de Monterrey [1] Daily Monterrey, Nuevo León El Diario de Morelos [1] Daily Morelos: El Diario de Sonora: Daily Sonora Diario de Toluca [1] Daily Toluca, Mexico: Diario de Yucatán: Daily Mérida, Yucatán [6] Diario del Yaqui [2] Daily Ciudad Obregón, Sonora [2] 1942 (circa) [10] Diario Eyipantla Milenio ...
Multimedios was founded in 1940 when Jesús Dionisio González acquired Monterrey radio station XEX, where he had formerly worked, for 12,500 pesos. [2] After World War II, the Mexican government requested the XEX callsign to build a national clear-channel station, and González selected the XEAW call letters, which had formerly belonged to a station in Reynosa, Tamaulipas.
Multimedios was founded in 1933 when Jesús Dionisio González acquired Monterrey radio station XEX, where he had formerly worked, for 12,500 pesos. [1] In the 1950s, the group became known as Organización Estrellas de Oro (Gold Stars Organization), and entered the television business on 31 October 1964, when it received a television allocation in Monterrey, [2] which later started on 24 ...
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.
Fernando Zamora from Milenio wrote: "Beyond influences and ascriptions to film currents, Ojos que no ven confirms that Mexican cinema continues to find its own voice. And it is something that thirty years ago seemed impossible." [12]
Then, the Milenio Cartel was incorporated into the Sinaloa Cartel, while La Familia and Beltran-Leyva cartels were destroyed by federal security forces. In 2011, La Resistencia continued its violent campaign against Los Zetas by joining forces between the Sinaloa, Gulf, La Familia and Knights Templar Cartels (itself a splinter from La Familia).