The New Indian Express#Indulge
{{short description|Indian English-language daily newspaper}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=May 2016}}
{{Infobox newspaper
| name = The New Indian Express
| logo = TNIE Masthead 2016.svg
| image = The New Indian Express front page design as of April 2011.jpg
| caption = The April 2011 redesigned front page of
The New Indian Express
| type = Daily newspaper
| format = Broadsheet
| foundation = 1932 in Madras, British India, Bifurcated from The Indian Express and renamed in 13 August 1999
| owners = Express Publications (Madurai) Limited
| publisher = Express Publications
| chiefeditor = Santwana Bhattacharya
| headquarters = Chennai – 600 058
| political = Centre-left
| language = English
| website = {{URL|https://www.newindianexpress.com/|newindianexpress.com}}
| oclc = 844203788
| circulation =
}}
The New Indian Express is an Indian English-language broadsheet daily newspaper published by the Chennai-based Express Publications. It was founded in 1932 as The Indian Express, under the ownership of Chennai-based P. Varadarajulu Naidu.
File:The New Indian Express, Coimbatore press (2).JPG Santwana Bhattacharya was appointed Editor-in-Chief on 1 July 2022,{{Cite web |date=2022-07-25 |title=The New Indian Express appoints Santwana Bhattacharya as new Editor |url=http://www.allaboutnewspapers.com/the-new-indian-express-appoints-santwana-bhattacharya-as-new-editor/ |access-date=2022-08-14 |website=All About Newspapers |language=en-US |archive-date=13 August 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220813061422/http://www.allaboutnewspapers.com/the-new-indian-express-appoints-santwana-bhattacharya-as-new-editor/ |url-status=live }} replacing G.S. Vasu.
History
Indian Express was first published on 5 September 1932, in Madras (now Chennai) by an Ayurvedic doctor and Indian National Congress member P Varadarajulu Naidu, publishing from the same press where he ran the Tamil Nadu Tamil weekly. But soon, on account of financial difficulties, he sold it to S. Sadanand, founder of The Free Press Journal, another English newspaper.
In 1933, The Indian Express opened its second office in Madurai and launched the Tamil daily Dinamani on 11 September 1934. Sadanand introduced several innovations and reduced the price, but later sold part of his stake in the form of convertible debentures to Ramnath Goenka due to financial difficulties. When The Free Press Journal further went into financial decline in 1935, Sadanand lost ownership of Indian Express after a long controversial court battle with Goenka, where blows were exchanged. Finally, a year later, Goenka bought the rest of the 26 per cent stake from Sadanand, and the paper came under his control, who took the already anti-establishment tone of the paper to greater heights.{{Citation needed|date=January 2008}} At that time it had to face stiff competition from the well-established The Hindu and the Mail, besides other prominent newspapers. In the late 1930s, the circulation was no more than 2,000.{{Citation needed|date=January 2008}}
In 1939 Goenka bought out Andhra Prabha, a prominent Telugu daily. It gained the name Three Musketeers for the three dailies.{{Citation needed|date=January 2008}} In 1940 the whole premises were gutted by fire. The Hindu, its rival, helped considerably in re-launching the paper, by getting it printed temporarily at one of its Swadesimithran's press and later offering its recently vacated premises in Madras at 2, Mount Road later to become the landmark Express Estates.{{Citation needed|date=January 2008}} This relocation helped the Express obtain better high-speed printing machines.
In later years, Goenka started the Mumbai edition with the landmark Express Towers as his office when the Morning Standard was bought by him in 1944. Two years later it became the Mumbai edition of The Indian Express. Later on, editions were started in cities like Madurai (1957), Bangalore (1965) and Ahmedabad (1968). The Financial Express was launched in 1961 from Mumbai, a Bangalore edition of Andhra Prabha was launched in 1965, and Gujarati dailies Lok Satta and Jansatta in 1952, from Ahmedabad and Baroda.
The Delhi edition started was when the Tej group's Indian News Chronicle was acquired in 1951, which from 1953 became the Delhi edition of Indian Express. In 1990 it bought the Sterling group of magazines and, along with it, the Gentleman magazine.
After Goenka's demise in 1991, two of the family members split the group into Indian Express Mumbai with all the north Indian editions, while the southern editions were grouped as Express Publications (Madurai) Limited with Chennai as headquarters.
Editions
The New Indian Express is now published from all 22 major cities in Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, Kerala, Odisha, Tamil Nadu Telangana and Morning Standard from Delhi.
Circulation
Image:The New Indian Express Masthead.png
The New Indian Express has a net paid circulation of 595,618 copies.Source: ABC J-D, 2010 NIE achieves its biggest penetration (paid sales per head of population) in the state of Kerala. In Kerala, the newspaper has a circulation of 1,24,005 copies. It claims to be the first Indian newspaper to give insurance benefits to its subscribers.{{Citation needed|date=April 2007}} It is published in a geographical area that covers approximately 24 per cent of the national population. The New Sunday Express (the Sunday edition of the NIE) is arguably the flagship publication, with magazine supplements incorporating national and international themes and sections on developmental issues, society, politics, literature, arts, cinema, travel, lifestyle, sports, new-age living, self-development and entertainment.
Recent changes
File:City Express Bengaluru.jpg
File:The New Sunday Express front page design as of April 2011.jpg
During late 2007/early 2008, there was a big shakeout of editorial staff, with many old hands leaving to make way for new. In April 2008, the newspaper underwent a major, drastic and exceptionally modern layout and design makeover and launched a huge advertising campaign.
=''Indulge''=
In October 2007, The New Indian Express launched a 40-page Friday magazine supplement (now, total colour) called Indulge exclusively for the Chennai edition. In September 2010, the lifestyle pullout began a Bangalore edition.{{Cite web |last=Bhula |first=Pooja |date=2024-02-05 |title=Who Owns Your Media: New Indian Express through disputes, dreams, on road to recovery |url=https://www.newslaundry.com/2024/02/05/who-owns-your-media-new-indian-express-through-disputes-dreams-on-road-to-recovery |access-date=2024-05-11 |website=Newslaundry |language=en}}
Websites
The New Indian Express Group of Companies also publishes Dinamani in Tamil and the following magazines: Cinema Express (Tamil), Samakalika Malayalam Vaarika (Malayalam), in addition to the website Edex Live.{{Cite web|last=Jain|first=Nitish|date=March 3, 2021|title=Impact of COVID-19 on Education – Edex Live interviews Nitish Jain (President, SP Jain)|url=https://www.spjain.org/blog/news/impact-of-covid-19-on-education-edex-live-interviews-nitish-jain-president-sp-jain|access-date=2021-08-11|website=SP Jain News|archive-date=11 August 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210811060740/https://www.spjain.org/blog/news/impact-of-covid-19-on-education-edex-live-interviews-nitish-jain-president-sp-jain|url-status=live}}
See also
References
{{Reflist}}
External links
- [https://epaper.newindianexpress.com/ Epaper]
- {{Twitter|id=NewIndianXpress}}
{{Newspapers in India}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:New Indian Express, The}}
Category:Newspapers established in 1932
Category:Newspapers established in 1991
Category:English-language newspapers published in India
Category:Mass media in Tamil Nadu
Category:Newspapers published in Coimbatore
Category:Newspapers published in Tiruchirappalli
Category:Mass media in Madurai