Media in
Miami,Florida, United States, includes newspapers, magazines, Internet-based
web sites, radio, television, and cinema. Florida produces some of its own media, while some comes from outside the state for Floridian
consumption.
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The Miami Metropolis newspaper began publication in May 1896, overseen initially by W.S. Graham and Wesley M. Featherby, and later by B.B. Tatum. In 1934, it became the Miami Daily News.[1][2] The Herald newspaper began in 1899, followed by the Central News and Miami Weekly in 1920. Tropic Magazine began in 1914.[3]
The Miami–Fort Lauderdale region is currently ranked by Nielsen Media Research as the 16th-largest
television market in the United States.[5] Affiliations listed below are the primary
subchannel of each respective station (displayed as x.1 via
PSIP). Additional networks/diginets are also available on many of the following stations' secondary subchannels (x.2 and up).
Aurora Wallace. Newspapers and the Making of Modern America: A History. Greenwood Press, 2005. (Chapter 5: Florida in Chains: The Miami Herald and the Tampa Tribune)
Gonzalo Soruco; Juliet Pinto (2010). "Mass Media Use Among South Florida Hispanics: An Intercultural Typology". Florida Communication Journal. 38. Florida Communication Association.
ISSN1050-3366.