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Le Petit Marocain was founded in 1925 [2] and was based in Casablanca. [3] The paper belonged to the company Mas Presse, which was controlled by French nationals Pierre Mas and Yves Mas. [ 4 ] [ 5 ] Its editorial line was ultra- colonialist , and it actively sought the promotion of the colonial policies of France in the country and it notably ...
Le Petit Journal, a French daily newspaper, published 1863–1944; Le Petit Journal, a weekly magazine based in Montreal, published 1926–1978; Le Petit Journal, a French-language news website aimed at French speakers living outside France
Le Petit Quotidien is a French daily newspaper for 6- to 10-year-old children. It was founded in 1998 by Play Bac Presse, on the model of Mon quotidien, a daily newspaper for 10- to 14-year-old children, which was launched in 1995. It is sold only by subscription. The paper is published daily, Mondays to Saturdays.
Le Petit Journal (pronounced [lə pəti ʒuʁnal]) was a conservative daily Parisian newspaper founded by Moïse Polydore Millaud; published from 1863 to 1944. Together with Le Petit Parisien , Le Matin , and Le Journal , it was one of the four major French dailies.
Prix de la Culture nationale de Catalunya (Barcelona, 2008 [2]) Prix Franco-allemand du journalisme - catégorie Internet (édition Allemagne, 2009 [ 3 ] See also
On 9 May 2016, Yann Barthès announced that he was leaving Canal+'s Le Petit Journal, a programme which he had presented since it began in 2004. [2] On the same day the TF1 Group announced that it had recruited Barthès to present two new programmes: a daily show on its channel TMC and a weekly show on the TF1 channel. [3]
Le Petit Journal (pronounced [lə pəti ʒuʁnal]) is a French news and entertainment television program that airs every weekday on Canal+, presented by Cyrille Eldin.It was hosted by journalist Yann Barthès from its beginnings in 2004 through to June 2016.
France Dimanche (celebrity news magazine) Le Journal du dimanche (news, culture, leisure) Le Monde Libertaire (anarcho-communist weekly) L'Obs (news magazine, centre-left) Le Point (news magazine, right-wing) Marianne (news magazine, right-wing) Paris-Match (headline news and celebrity lifestyle features) Télérama (culture)