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JoongAng Ilbo

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JoongAng Ilbo
The Korea Daily
TypeDaily newspaper
FormatBerliner
Owner(s)JoongAng Media Network
PublisherSong Philho
FoundedSeptember 22, 1965
Political alignmentCentre-right
HeadquartersSunhwa-dong, Jung-gu, Seoul, South Korea
Circulation1,292,498 (as of 2012)[1]
Websitejoongang.joins.com
Korean name
Hangul
중앙일보
Hanja
中央日報
Revised RomanizationJungangilbo
McCune–ReischauerChungang-ilbo

JoongAng Ilbo ([The Central Times] Error: {{Lang-xx}}: text has italic markup (help)) is a South Korean daily newspaper published in Seoul, South Korea. It is one of the three biggest newspapers in South Korea. The paper also publishes an English edition, Korea JoongAng Daily, in alliance with the International New York Times.[2]

History

It was first published on September 22, 1965 by Lee Byung-chul, the founder of Samsung Group which once owned the Tongyang Broadcasting Company (TBC). In 1980, JoongAng Ilbo gave up TBC and TBC merged with KBS. JoongAng Ilbo is the pioneer in South Korea for the use of horizontal copy layout, topical sections, and specialist reporters with investigative reporting teams. Since April 15, 1995, JoongAng Ilbo has been laid out horizontally and also became a morning newspaper from then on.

Korea JoongAng Daily

The Korea JoongAng Daily is the English language version of the newspaper, and it is one of three English-language daily newspapers in South Korea, along with The Korea Times and The Korea Herald. It runs mainly news and feature stories by staff reporters, and some stories translated from the Korean language newspaper. The Korea JoongAng Daily is currently sold together with the International New York Times.

As of March 18, 2007, it has produced a Sunday edition called JoongAng Sunday.

Worldwide

It also publishes a United States edition, with branches from Toronto to Buenos Aires. Its parent company, Joongang Media Network (JMNet) holds publication rights to Korean editions of Newsweek and Forbes as well as 25% of the shares of JTBC cable TV.

Criticism

See also

References

  1. ^ "Korea Audit Bureau of Circulations".
  2. ^ http://international.nytimes.com/

External links