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In 1989, there was a total of 180 weekly magazines in the Czech Republic. [1] As of 1995 the magazine sector in the country was small and fragmented. [1] In 2010, the number of magazines was nearly 1800. [2] There are foreign magazine publishing companies in the country, including Sanoma Magazines Praha, which is a subsidiary of Sanoma. [3]
Pages in category "Magazines published in the Czech Republic" The following 6 pages are in this category, out of 6 total. ... This page was last edited on 6 June 2020
On September 25, 1949, the race was held for the first and the last time in Czechoslovakia as part of the Grand Prix motor racing (later evolved into Formula One). [4] The Czechoslovakian Grand Prix in 1949 was run clockwise on a shorter 17.800 km (11.060 mi) layout, which turned right at Veselka, bypassed Ostrovacice and entered Žebětín ...
Reflex is a Czech weekly magazine focusing on political, social and cultural topics. [1] It was founded in 1990 and is currently owned by company Czech News Center. It is one of the Czech Republic's most controversial and widely read social-political magazines; its print circulation of 60,000 copies (as of January, 2010) reaches approximately 270,000 readers. [2]
dTest is a Czech monthly magazine established in 1992. [1] The magazine is the official organ of the Czech Association of Consumers. [2] It focuses on testing products and services and also provides help with consumer and seller rights, informs about new laws, warns against sharp practices of sellers and against suspicious commercials, advertisements, etc. [1] There are also clues and tips for ...
The Turkish edition was founded and initially written by M. Berker Güngör (alias "Maddog") in 1997 and then Sinan Akkol (alias "Blaxis") joined the family couple of years later when he attended to a contest and became the heart of Level; today it is the leading computer games magazine in Turkey, with over 25 authors and distribution of 20,000 per issue.
Veselka was nearly forced to close in the mid-1970s, when the construction of the Second Avenue Subway (later canceled) resulted in street closures along the adjacent section of Second Avenue. [6] By the time the New York City fiscal crisis hit in the 1970s, Veselka was a fixture in the neighborhood. It was able to expand during the economic ...
Respekt was founded very soon after the fall of Communist party from power in 1989 [1] by a group of samizdat journalists as one of the first independent magazines. It is the successor of Informační servis ( Information service ), an opposition samizdat paper. [ 1 ]