Kalpana Kalpana (Editor)

Apple Daily (Taiwan)

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Type
  
Daily newspaper

Owner(s)
  
Website
  
Official website

Format
  
Political alignment
  
Center

Apple Daily (Taiwan)

Founded
  
2 May 2003 (13 years ago) (2 May 2003)

The Apple Daily (Chinese: 蘋果日報; pinyin: Píngguǒ Rìbào; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: Pîn-kó-ji̍t-pò) is a newspaper printed in Taiwan and owned by Hong Kong-based Next Digital. Next Media is based in Hong Kong and also prints the Apple Daily (Hong Kong). The Next Media Group experiments on cartoonifying news with the Next Media Animation, provides animated news stories on scandals and crimes in Hong Kong and Taiwan, as well as on pop culture in other parts of the world.

Contents

History

Apple Daily (Taiwan) first published on 2 May 2003. It is the first newspaper in Taiwan to publish 365 days a year, and it is the only newspaper in Taiwan subject to the circulation audit from Audit Bureau of Circulations (ROC).

2012 sale and anti-monopoly campaigns

In 2012, the Next Media Group withdrew from the Taiwan market and sold its Taiwan operations, including Apple Daily, Sharp Daily, Next Weekly and the Next TV cable network. In November 29, investors including Want Want China Times group president Tsai Shao-chung, Formosa Plastics Group chairman William Wong and Chinatrust Charity Foundation chairman Jeffrey Koo, Jr, signed a contract with the Next Media Group in Macau. Tsai Shao-chung is the son of Tsai Eng-ming, the chair of the Want Want Group. Tsai Eng-ming is known for his controversial comment in an interview with Washington Post, stating that reports about massacre in the Tiananmen Square protest of 1989 were not true. Tsai owns China Times, one of the largest newspapers in Taiwan, and has acquired 60% of the second largest cable TV services on the island. If the Next Media buyout deal were approved by the Taiwan Government, the Want Want Group will control nearly 50% of Taiwan's news media. Fearing that Tsai's pro-Beijing position and the media monopoly would hurt media freedom and democracy, protesters campaign to urge the Taiwan Government cancel the Next Media sale.

References

Apple Daily (Taiwan) Wikipedia