The Daily Telegraph (Australia)
Categories: News Corporation subsidiaries | Australian newspapers | Newspaper stubs
The Daily Telegraph is a tabloid newspaper published in Sydney, New South Wales, by Rupert Murdoch's News Corporation.
The Tele, as it is affectionately known, was founded in 1879 and was a staple in Sydney print media right up until 1990 when it merged with its afternoon sister paper The Daily Mirror to form The Daily Telegraph-Mirror with morning and afternoon editions though the afternoon editions were later discontinued.
The new paper continued in this vein until January 1996 when reader pressure for a shorter title caused the name of the paper to revert to The Daily Telegraph, despite staff concerns that former Mirror readers would now feel disenfranchised. The circulation of the newspaper in the first half of 2004 was around 409,000 per day, the largest of a Sydney newspaper.
Like its British counterpart, the paper maintains a strong right wing conservative lean, with columnists such as Piers Akerman.
It has been nicknamed "The Daily Terror, "the "Terrorgraph" or the "Telecrap," especially by left-leaning intellectuals. It is more lurid than its Melbourne counterpart, the Herald Sun.
The Saturday edition is called The Saturday Daily Telegraph and the Sunday edition is called The Sunday Telegraph.
External links