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The company was previously a subsidiary of Channel 10, and produced news programmes under the name of Channel 10 News (Hebrew: חדשות עשר, romanized: Hadashot Eser, lit. '[Channel] Ten News') until the Reshet-Channel 10 merger that took effect on 16 January 2019. [ 1 ]
Hadashot Israel began producing Channel 10's news programmes. Plans for the news channel faded, and Eilon left Hadashot Israel to found Channel 10's independent news company in 2003. Channel 10's news, which aired at 19:00, was moved to 20:00 to compete with Channel 2's news.
Hadashot initially had a young, left-wing, anti-establishment image, and was written in youthful Hebrew, bordering on slang. The paper's approach was inconsistent; sometimes yellow, sometimes highbrow. [2]
HaHadashot (Hebrew: החדשות, lit. 'News'), formerly HaHadashot 2 (Hebrew: החדשות 2, lit. '[Channel] 2 News'), is the flagship, evening television news bulletin broadcast at 8 pm IST, produced by Israel Television News Company since 4 November 1993.
[11] [12] The newspaper was established on 18 June 1919 by a group of businessmen including the philanthropist Isaac Leib Goldberg, [13] initially called Hadashot Ha'aretz ("News of the Land"). Later, the name was shortened to Haaretz. [14] The literary section of the paper attracted leading Hebrew writers of the time. [15]
Channel 10 began broadcasting on January 28, 2002. The channel offers original drama series, entertainment shows, news shows, lifestyle programs and foreign programs. Initially the channel was going to have two franchisees, Israel 10 and Eden Broadcasting. [4] Due to delays, Eden Broadcasting and Israel 10 merged their license in June 2002. [5]
Since 16 January 2019, the day Reshet-Channel 10 merger took effect, Eilon is the main presenter of the 5 pm IST edition of HaHadashot 13 (renamed from Hadashot Eser on that day). He presented a one-time special bulletin broadcast at midnight 15–16 January 2019, which was preceded by a pre-merger special.
On March 4, 1984, a new competitor to Yediot Ahronoth was established, the Hadashot newspaper founded by Amos Schocken. Hadashot featured a large color headline and color pages, and used more innovative and less formal language.