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Tabloid [1] ~36,000 copies sold sensationalist, populist? 2016 ... Novi Sad Berliner ~8,000 copies sold Dnevnik Vojvodina pres; 1953 www.dnevnik.rs: Danas: Belgrade
The first issue was published on November 15, 1942, as an organ of the provincial people's liberation board for Vojvodina in an underground printing house in Novi Sad. Its first editor was Svetozar Marković Toza who was later executed by the Axis occupation authorities on February 9, 1943, and subsequently proclaimed a people's hero by the ...
Svet Tambure is a music and culture magazine, published triannually in Novi Sad, Serbia. It was first published in 2013 by a number of tambura musicians. It was a step forward from tamburica.org, [1] which was the first tambura instruments-oriented web portal. As of 2016, it is the only published magazine about this subject in the world. [2]
The settlement officially gained the present name Novi Sad (Neoplanta in Latin) in 1748 when it became a "free royal city". In 1780, Novi Sad had about 2,000 houses, of which 1,144 were Serbian. For much of the 18th and 19th centuries, Novi Sad was the largest city populated with ethnic Serbs in the world.
Večernje novosti (Serbian Cyrillic: Вечерње новости; Evening News) is a Serbian daily tabloid newspaper. [5] Founded in 1953, it quickly grew into a high-circulation daily. Novosti (as most people call it for short) also employs foreign correspondents spread around 23 national capitals around the globe.
Display rack of British newspapers during the midst of the News International phone hacking scandal (5 July 2011). Many of the newspapers in the rack are tabloids. Tabloid journalism is a popular style of largely sensationalist journalism, which takes its name from the tabloid newspaper format: a small-sized newspaper also known as a half broadsheet. [1]
RTS was established in 1992 with the merger of RTB and regional networks Radio-Television Novi Sad and Radio-Television Priština into a true national network. [9] All transmitters, relay stations, antennas and other television equipment once owned by these broadcasters were inherited by RTS. [10]
Informer is a Serbian tabloid newspaper based in Belgrade. It is known for its political bias in favor of the ruling Serbian Progressive Party (SNS) and its sensationalist stories. [7] [8] [9] The newspaper has been accused of spreading disinformation [10] and sensationalism. [11] [12]