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Newspaper Language City Average issue readership [6] 2019 (in millions) Owner 1 Dainik Jagran: Hindi: Various cities and states 16.872 Jagran Prakashan Limited: 2 Dainik Bhaskar: Hindi: Various cities and states 15.566 D B Corp Ltd. 3 Hindustan: Hindi: Various cities and states 13.213 HT Media: 4 Amar Ujala: Hindi: Various cities and states 9. ...
The Bombay Times is a free supplement of The Times of India, in the Mumbai (formerly Bombay) region. It covers celebrity news, news features, international and national music news, international and national fashion news, lifestyle and feature articles pegged on news events both national and international that have local interest value.
India has the second-largest newspaper market in the world, with daily newspapers reporting a combined circulation of over 240 million copies as of 2018. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] There are publications produced in each of the 22 scheduled languages of India and in many of the other languages spoken throughout the country .
Navbharat Times (NBT; lit. ' New India Times ') is a Hindi newspaper [2] [3] distributed in Delhi, Mumbai, Lucknow and Kanpur.It is from the stable of Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd (BCCL), which also publishes other dailies including The Times of India, The Economic Times, Maharashtra Times and also magazines such as Filmfare and Femina.
Bennett Coleman and Company Limited (BCCL), d/b/a the Times Group, is an Indian media conglomerate based in Mumbai. [3] Notable media properties owned and operated by the group include India's largest selling daily English-language newspaper The Times of India, television channels such as Times Now, the radio station network Radio Mirchi, and magazines Filmfare and Femina.
These newspapers carried news of the areas under the British rule. [12] The Bombay Samachar, founded in 1822 and printed in Gujarati is the oldest newspaper in Asia still in print. [13] On 30 May 1826 Udant Martand (The Rising Sun), the first Hindi-language newspaper published in India, started from Calcutta (now Kolkata), published every ...
Fardunji’s Bombay Samachar, which started off as a weekly paper, priced at Rs 2 per month, [5] was turned into a daily in 1832. [2] It would serve as a template for the foundation of several other Parsi-run newspapers, including the Indian Spectator (later the Voice of India) and the Bombay Times (now a supplement of the Times of India).
Blitz was a popular investigative weekly tabloid newspaper or newsmagazine published and edited by Russi Karanjia from Bombay. [1] Started in 1941, it was India's first weekly tabloid and focussed on investigative journalism and political news. [2] It was published in English, and with editions in Hindi, Urdu and Marathi languages. [3]