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Daily Spanish-language newspaper in Miami, Florida From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
El Nuevo Herald is a newspaper published daily in Spanish in Southeast Florida, United States. Its headquarters is in Doral.[3] El Nuevo Herald's sister paper is the Miami Herald, also produced by the McClatchy Company.
Type | Daily newspaper |
---|---|
Format | Broadsheet |
Owner(s) | The McClatchy Company[1] |
President | Nancy A. Meyer |
Founded | 1977 (as El Herald) |
Language | Spanish |
Headquarters | Doral, Florida, USA |
Circulation | 42,069 daily 59,617 Sunday (as of 2015)[2] |
ISSN | 2688-8785 |
OCLC number | 17427907 |
Website | www |
Founded: First published in 1977 as El Miami Herald; expanded and relaunched in 1987 as el Nuevo Herald,[4] available as a standalone newspaper in 1998.
Key Executives:
Nancy A. Meyer, President, Miami Herald Media Company [5]
Monica R. Richardson, Executive Editor [5]
Distinction: Award-winning, Spanish-language daily newspaper in the nation's third-largest Hispanic market.
Circulation Area: Miami-Dade and Broward counties.
Market: The South Florida market is the primary market in the state of Florida with nearly 4.3 million residents and ranks as the 15th largest in the United States. It is the third-largest Hispanic market in the nation.
Strength:
Of daily newspapers, el Nuevo Herald is the United States' biggest Spanish-language Sunday paper (68,781) and the second-largest daily (53,924). El Nuevo Herald carries an extraordinary sphere of influence in Latin America and the Caribbean for its groundbreaking news.
Customers: Hispanic readers in South Florida, the Caribbean and Latin America; web visitors from around the world.
2002
2004
2005
National Association of Hispanic Publications
On September 8, 2006, the publisher of the Miami Herald, Jesús Díaz Jr., fired three Nuevo Herald journalists – Pablo Alfonso, Wilfredo Cancio Isla and Olga Connor – because they freelanced for Radio/TV Marti, a U.S. Government news agency.[6] Less than a month later, Díaz was instructed by his superiors at The McClatchy Company, the parent company of the Miami Herald and el Nuevo Herald, to re-hire the three journalists because they had prior approval to freelance for Radio/TV Marti from their supervisor at the time, el Nuevo Herald executive editor Humberto Castelló. Díaz resigned after reinstating the fired journalists.
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