What are the main newspapers in New Zealand?
Table of Contents
- 1 What are the main newspapers in New Zealand?
- 2 Who controls the media in New Zealand?
- 3 What is New Zealand’s biggest newspaper?
- 4 What is the oldest newspaper in NZ?
- 5 Who owns the New Zealand Herald?
- 6 Does NZME own TVNZ?
- 7 Where does Auckland’s media come from?
- 8 Where can I find information on media ownership in New Zealand?
What are the main newspapers in New Zealand?
Daily newspapers in New Zealand
- New Zealand Herald. One of the most widely circulated daily newspapers in New Zealand.
- Dominion Post. Daily newspaper published in New Zealand.
- Press. New Zealand’s leading broadsheet newspaper.
- Otago Daily Times (ODT)
- Waikato Times.
- Southland Times.
- Hawke’s Bay Today.
- Manawatu Standard.
Who controls the media in New Zealand?
New Zealand media ownership – some key trends and events For the first time in six years, New Zealand media companies are exclusively owned by financial institutions. Media moguls and News Corp have sold all their shares in New Zealand media companies.
Who owns NZ media and entertainment?
NZME.
New Zealand Media and Entertainment/Parent organizations
In 2016, NZME and Stuff Ltd. proposed merging their operations in New Zealand, with Stuff’s Australian parent company Fairfax Media receiving a 41\% stake in the combine business plus $55 million cash.
What is New Zealand’s biggest newspaper?
The New Zealand Herald
Newspaper | Location |
---|---|
1 The New Zealand Herald | Auckland |
2 Otago Daily Times | Dunedin |
3 The National Business Review | Auckland |
4 The Gisborne Herald | Gisborne |
What is the oldest newspaper in NZ?
the New Zealand Gazette
New Zealand’s first newspaper, the New Zealand Gazette, was printed in London in 1839 by Edward Gibbon Wakefield’s New Zealand Company. Two issues were distributed to colonists migrating to form the company settlement at Wellington.
Who owns New Zealands newspapers?
Fairfax New Zealand
The ownership of New Zealand newspapers is dominated by Fairfax New Zealand and NZME, with Fairfax having 48.6 per cent of the daily newspaper circulation.
Who owns the New Zealand Herald?
New Zealand Media and Entertainment
The Wilson and Horton families were both represented in the company, known as Wilson & Horton, until 1996 when Tony O’Reilly’s Independent News & Media Group of Dublin purchased the Horton family’s interest in the company. The Herald is now owned by New Zealand Media and Entertainment.
Does NZME own TVNZ?
TVNZ was established in February 1980 following the merger of the two government-owned television networks, Television One (now TVNZ 1) and South Pacific Television (now TVNZ 2), under a single administration….TVNZ.
Our Nation, Our Voice | |
---|---|
Type | Crown entity |
Headquarters | Auckland, New Zealand |
Number of locations | New Zealand |
What is the print media like in New Zealand?
This is a list of print media in New Zealand. New Zealand once had several daily newspapers in each major city, but, as in other countries, the medium was damaged by radio and then television. Each city now has only one daily newspaper. There are no truly national newspapers, although The New Zealand Herald…
Where does Auckland’s media come from?
Most media organisations operate Auckland -based newsrooms with Parliamentary Press Gallery reporters and international media partners, but most broadcast programmes, music and syndicated columns are imported from the United States and United Kingdom.
Where can I find information on media ownership in New Zealand?
This is a slightly revised first section of the longer paper, “News Media Ownership In New Zealand”, which is available on the CAFCA Website, www.cafca.org.nz, and recently had a major update.
What has happened to New Zealand’s media space?
The New Zealand Ownership Report 2014 report finds that the New Zealand media market has failed to produce new, innovative media outlets, and that all the efforts to establish non-profit outlets have proved unsustainable. The report confirms the general findings of previous reports that New Zealand media space has remained highly commercial.