Veintitrés

Veintitrés
Director Diego Saraceni
Categories News
Frequency weekly
Publisher Manucorp, S.A.
Total circulation
(2011)
26,000[1]
First issue July 16, 1998
Country  Argentina
Language Spanish
Website veintitres.elargentino.com

Veintitrés is a news magazine published in Argentina.

History

The magazine was established in 1998 as Veintiuno ("Twenty-one," in reference to the upcoming 21st century) by Jorge Lanata and colleagues from the television news magazine, Día D: Adolfo Castelo, Olga Gatti, Claudio Martínez, Jorge Repiso, Ernesto Tenembaum, and Marcelo Zlotogwiazda. Advertised as La revista del siglo que viene ("The magazine for the century to come"), it later appeared as Veintidós, and from 2000 onward by its current title.

Much as Lanata's successful news daily, Página/12, had done, Veintitrés adopted a format of bold headlines and graphics, as well as a muck-raking editorial style. The magazine also became known for its gag gifts, chosen in allusion to the news story of the day. Lanata sold a 75% stake in 2001 to investigative journalist Ernesto Tenenbaum,[2] after which Veintitrés was directed by Guillermo Alfieri; Alfieri left the magazine in 2008 to join Lanata's short-lived Crítica de la Argentina. Veintitrés was purchased in 2008 by Sergio Szpolski, who, in turn, sold a 50% stake in Grupo Veintitrés (which also publishes Newsweek Argentina, Tiempo Argentino, among other periodicals, and operates Channel 23) to Matías Garfunkel in 2011. The media group's broadcasters and publications established themselves as some of the most supportive of Kirchnerism among Argentina's diverse media.[3]

References