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Beijing Youth Daily
Simplified Chinese newspaper From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Beijing Youth Daily (Abbreviation: BYD,[1] simplified Chinese: 北京青年报; traditional Chinese: 北京青年報; pinyin: Běijīng qīngnián bào) is the official newspaper of the Beijing Municipal Committee of the Communist Youth League of China.[2]
Beijing Youth Daily was launched on 21 March 1949,[3] and is now published by the Beijing Youth Daily Agency (北京青年报社).[4] It is the most widely circulated metropolitan newspaper in Beijing.[5]
Beijing Youth Daily has halted production three times in its history. It has been published since 1981.
It is assigned the Chinese Issue Number (Chinese: 统一刊号; pinyin: tǒngyī kānhào) CN11-0103.
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Publication
The daily typically publishes about 50 broadsheet pages per day. In addition to its flagship Beijing Youth Daily, the media group publishes nine other newspapers:
- Legal Evening News (Chinese: 《法制晚报》; pinyin: fǎzhì wǎnbào)
- First Financial Daily (Chinese: 《第一财经日报》; pinyin: dìyī cáijīng rìbào)
- Hebei Youth Daily (Chinese: 《河北青年报》; pinyin: héběi qīngnián bào)
- Beijing Science and Technology News (Chinese: 《北京科技报》; pinyin: běijīng kējì bào)
- Youth Weekend (Chinese: 《青年周末》; pinyin: qīngnián zhōumò)
- Beijing Today (Chinese: 《今日北京》; pinyin: jīnrì běijīng)
- Middle School Times (Chinese: 《中学时事报》; pinyin: zhōngxué shíshì bào)
- Beijing Children's Daily (Chinese: 《北京少年报》; pinyin: běijīng shàonián bào)
- Top Horizon (Chinese: 《TOP时空》; pinyin: TOP shíkōng)
- Beijing Youth Weekly (Chinese: 《北京青年周刊》; pinyin: běijīng qīngnián zhōukān)
As well as four magazines:
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History
On December 22, 2004, Beijing Media Corporation Limited (北青传媒股份有限公司), under Beijing Youth Daily Holdings, listed its H-shares in Hong Kong,[6] becoming the first Chinese mainland media company to be publicly traded overseas.[7]
References
External links
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