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Diários Associados

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The Diários Associados, or Associated Dailies, are a union of Brazilian communication media created by Assis Chateaubriand, who directed it in a personalist, authoritarian style. It was illegally financed by the populist dictator Getúlio Vargas to give it support against independent media, but survived him as a populist political force until the 1964 Revolution. Today it maintains the populist line, but it was greatly diminished in relative circulation, amount of channels and influence by the 1964 military regime, as well by the death of its founder.

The Diários Associados owned Rede Tupi, the first Brazilian Television Network, through its affiate, the Rede de Emissoras Associadas, from 1950 to 1980.

Today the group has 50 vehicles of communication, which are:

15 Newspapers 12 Radio networks 8 Television networks 9 Internet portals and 5 other sites 1 Foundation and 5 other companies

Newspapers

Radio

Television

Portals

Other companies