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Lotofácil was scheduled to be launched in April 2003 by Caixa Econômica Federal (CEF), "probably on the 7th", according to the then Jornal do Brasil columnist Ricardo Boechat. [7] However, the following month he reported that there was a "powerful lobby of lottery associations" preventing the launch of Lotofácil, noting the slow progress of ...
Since the 1952–53 season, it hands the Bota de Prata award to the Primeira Liga's top goalscorer. It is the most popular newspaper among Portuguese emigrants abroad and is widely read in the former Portuguese colonies in Africa. From 2006, it is also printed in Newark, New Jersey, an American city with a large Portuguese population. [citation ...
In 2007, Record was the third-best-selling Portuguese newspaper with a circulation of 74,000 copies. [11] The paper claimed it was the leading sport newspaper in Portugal with 62,245 copies in 2011, and was also the leading website in Portuguese sport newspapers, with 216 million page views recorded in May 2012. [12]
O Jogo was first published on 22 February 1985 by the Jornal de Notícias company in Porto, and it is seen as appealing mainly to supporters of FC Porto, [1] [2] being publicly criticized by Benfica, [3] [4] suppressing the gap of the two other national sports newspapers, A Bola and Record. O Jogo has also a Lisbon edition.
At this point, the Company Dia also included the newspaper Meia Hora, the website O Dia Online, O Dia TV and FM Radio Dia, as well as a news agency and Ary Carvalho Institute. In April 2010 Editora O Dia sold part of its capital to EJESA, Company Journalistic Econômico SA, which publishes the business newspaper Brasil Econômico, for $75 million.
Jornal Hoje is a news program aired by the Brazilian television broadcaster TV Globo. The program is broadcast in the early afternoon from Monday to Saturday as part of a news block that also includes Praça TV and Globo Esporte. It is currently presented by Evaristo Costa, Alan Severiano and César Tralli.
Jornal de Angola is the only daily newspaper in Angola since the independence of the country in 1975. The organization uses wire feeds from ANGOP, Agence France-Presse, Reuters, EFE, and Prensa Latina. The newspaper is published in Luanda by Edições Novembro. In addition to the printed newspaper, it has an online edition. [1]
The paper is published on a biweekly basis [3] and was owned by Impresa [4] until 2018. It provides literary and cultural news. [2] [3] In 2018 Portuguese company Trust in News (TIN) acquired the paper. [5] The circulation of JL was 27,000 copies in August 1981 and 25,550 in June 1982. [2] It fell to 15,290 copies in June 1986. [2]