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This is a list of newspapers published in Metro Manila. Metro Manila has four major English-language daily papers: the Manila Bulletin, The Manila Times, the Philippine Daily Inquirer, and The Philippine Star. [1] [2]
This list of newspapers currently being published in the Philippines includes broadsheets and tabloids published daily and distributed nationwide. Regional newspapers or those published in the regions are also included.
The front page of Manila Bulletin, when it was still known as Bulletin Today, on the day after Benigno Aquino Jr.'s assassination Former logo used from 1991 to 2019. Manila Bulletin was founded on February 2, 1900 by Carlson Taylor as a shipping journal. In 1957, the newspaper was acquired by Swiss expatriate Hans Menzi. [8] [9]
Population % – urban Metro Manila and suburbs: 15.9 million: 46% Mega Manila: 17.9 million: 52% MegaTAM markets* 13.2 million: 38% Balance-urban Philippines: 16.5 million: 48% Urban Philippines: 34.4 million: 100% Philippines: 88.7 million – *Metro Manila, Iloilo City, Metro Cebu, and Metro Davao
Student newspapers published in Metro Manila (6 P) Pages in category "Newspapers published in Metro Manila" The following 34 pages are in this category, out of 34 total.
It was then the sister newspaper of Manila Times under the Gokongwei family who acquired the broadsheet in 1989 from the Roces family. The tabloid's first head office was located at the Manila Times Compound in Quezon City before it was relocated to Mandaluyong. English was primarily used in its articles until they shifted to Tagalog in the 2000s.
Mega Manila encompasses the county's three most populated administrative regions – Calabarzon at number one, followed by Metro Manila, and Central Luzon at third. The total population of Metro Manila and all the 12 provinces, including their three independent cities, 47 component cities, and 238 municipalities, is 41,099,507 as of 2020. This ...
In 1941 the estimated population of the Philippines reached 17,000,000. [40] Manila's population was 684,000. [41] By then, some 27% of the population could speak English as a second language, while the number of Spanish speakers as first language had further fallen to 3% from 10 to 14% at the beginning of the century.