Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
il Giornale della Libertà was a free weekly political, headed by Michela Vittoria Brambilla, and attached to il Giornale. It was severely criticized by its editorial staff, who later went on strike, which was the second time after the departure of Montanelli. [29] The last issue was published in May 2008. [30]
Editoriale Nazionale – Il Resto del Carlino, La Nazione, Il Giorno; Gruppo Amodei – Corriere dello Sport, Tuttosport; Nord Est Multimedia – Messaggero Veneto, Il Piccolo, Il Mattino di Padova, La Tribuna di Treviso, La Nuova Venezia, Corriere delle Alpi; Antonio Angelucci – Il Giornale, Libero, Il Tempo
Vittorio Feltri (born 25 June 1943) is an Italian journalist and politician. Among the many Italian newspapers he directed, he was most recently the editor-in-chief of daily Libero until 2020, and since 2023 he is back at the Il Giornale as editorial director.
La Verità ("The Truth") is an Italian newspaper published in Milan, Italy.The newspaper is conservative and right-wing populist in outlook [1] [2] and often offers Catholic-inspired views, albeit being somewhat critical of Pope Francis. [3]
Quotidiano.net, marketed as Quotidiano Nazionale ("National Daily Newspaper") or simply QN, is an Italian news website launched in 1999 and owned by the publishing house Poligrafici Editoriale, whose print publications include the newspapers Il Giorno, il Resto del Carlino, and La Nazione. The website contains mainly Italian and International ...
Il Giorno was founded by the Italian businessman Cino Del Duca on 21 March 1956, [1] with the journalist Gaetano Baldacci, to challenge Corriere della Sera, also a daily newspaper published in Milan. Later, because of a financial crisis, Italian public administrator Enrico Mattei and the state-owned oil company Eni [ 2 ] bought part of the ...
Mercury going retrograde means a few different things, depending on how you look at it. In astronomy (i.e. the study of celestial objects), a planet is in retrograde when it looks like it’s ...
The film depicts the daily life of a fictitious Italian daily newspaper, Il Giornale ("The Journal"). The newspaper caters to a conservative, fascist, bourgeois readership. . Its chief-editor Bizanti gives a right-wing slant to the most trivial news items, while at the same time sweetening the thornier issues, such as unemployment and police brutali