L'espresso

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l'Espresso
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L'espresso frontpage.jpeg
l'Espresso, 6 December 2007
Editor it
Former editors Arrigo Benedetti, Eugenio Scalfari, Daniela Hamaui, Bruno Manfellotto
Categories Newsmagazine
Frequency Weekly
Circulation 195,787 (June 2014)
Year founded 1955; 69 years ago (1955)
Company Gruppo Editoriale L'Espresso
Country Italy
Based in Rome
Language Italian
Website espresso.repubblica.it

l'Espresso is an Italian weekly news magazine.[1] It is one of the two most prominent Italian weeklies, the other being Panorama.

History and profile

One of Italy's foremost newsmagazines, l'Espresso was founded as a weekly magazine in Rome in October 1955[2][3] by the N.E.R. (Nuove Edizioni Romane) publishing house of Carlo Caracciolo and the progressive industrialist Adriano Olivetti, manufacturer of Olivetti typewriters. The chief editors were Arrigo Benedetti and Eugenio Scalfari.[4]

l'Espresso was characterized from the beginning by an aggressive investigative journalism strongly focussed on corruption and clientelism by the Christian Democrat party. In the 1950s it uncovered major scandals in the health and housing industries.[5] This made the main shareholder Olivetti unpopular with the ministries and large companies that were the primary customers of his main business. In 1956, with the magazine losing money, Olivetti made Caracciolo a present of the majority shareholding.[4] Benedetti and Scalfari entered as major shareholders as well.[6]

The experienced Benedetti, who had directed the newsmagazine L'Europeo (1945–54), was the editor-in-chief until 1963, when he handed over to Scalfari. At the time average circulation reached 70,000 copies.[6] In 1968, Scalfari was elected to the Italian Chamber of Deputies (1968–1972) and handed over as editor to it.

The original format of the magazine was in the form of large newspaper and it was converted into a small glossy format in 1974.[5] In 1965 it introduced colour printing for photos, text and adverts. The publishing company N.E.R. changed its corporate title to Editoriale L'Espresso in 1975 while circulation at the time exceeded 300,000 copies.[6] In January 1976 the Gruppo Editoriale L'Espresso also launched the daily newspaper La Repubblica with Eugenio Scalfari as editor-in-chief, in a joint venture with Arnoldo Mondadori Editore.[6]

In 1967 it revealed the attempted 1964 coup d'état by General Giovanni Di Lorenzo and in 1976 it conducted a strong campaign against the then Italian President, Giovanni Leone, for his alleged involvement in the Lockheed scandal. During the 1970s and 1980s it strongly supported the campaigns for divorce and abortion.[5]

From the mid-1970s onwards a fierce competition developed with Italy's other major newsmagazine, Panorama, founded in 1962. The rivalry increased dramatically in the early 1990s when Silvio Berlusconi – already controlling Panorama – attempted to absorb l'Espresso as well.[5] The clash between Berlusconi and Carlo De Benedetti over the control of the Mondadori Group resulted in a break-up of assets leading to the creation of the Espresso Group in its current form, with the CIR Group as majority shareholder.[6]

Renowned journalists and writers who worked for l'Espresso include Giorgio Bocca, Umberto Eco, it, Enzo Biagi, Michele Serra, Marco Travaglio, Roberto Saviano, Naomi Klein and Jeremy Rifkin. In 2002 Daniela Hamaui was appointed editor-in-chief of the weekly, being the first woman to hold the post.[7]

l'Espresso is based in Rome, but its business and finance newsroom is in Milan, Italy, now under Gruppo Editoriale L'Espresso property.[2] The editor is it. l'Espresso has a website with news and blogs.

Circulation

L'Espresso had a circulation of 300,057 copies in 1984.[8] It rose to 400,334 copies in 2007,[9] making it the fourth best-selling news magazine in Italy.[10] It was 334,260 copies in 2010.[11] In 2013 the magazine had a circulation of 239,000 copies based on the report of the Gruppo Editoriale L'Espresso.[2] The circulation of the magazine was 195,787 copies in June 2014.[12]

Editors

The signatures

For the Espresso have written in the past well-known journalists and columnists in the information world, among them it, Giorgio Bocca, Enzo Biagi, it and Edmondo Berson, among the most well-known current signatures remember Eugenio Scalfari, Umberto Eco, Michele Serra, it, Marco Travaglio, it, it, Massimo Cacciari, Gianni Vattimo, Umberto Veronesi, Luigi Zingales, the Vatican correspondent Sandro Magister, the writer Roberto Saviano and the economist Jeremy Rifkin.

Contributors

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See also

List of magazines published in Italy

References

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  4. 4.0 4.1 Carlo Caracciolo: newspaper publisher who set up La Repubblica, The Times, 8 January 2009
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  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.3 6.4 History, Gruppo Editoriale L'Espresso (Retrieved 30 January 2010)
  7. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. – via Questia (subscription required)
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  12. Data Accertamenti Diffusione Stampa