Herald Sun

Newspaper Name : Herald Sun
About Us: The Herald Sun is Victoria’s home for breaking news, footy and hard-hitting opinion and holds the title of Australia’s most-read newspaper. Melbourne’s biggest selling newspaper has a proud history of leading the agenda and advocating for Victorians. As a leading partner with the Good Friday Appeal, we believe strongly in our community. As the home of Australia’s No.1 fantasy footy game SuperCoach and the best AFL writers in the business, we share a deep passion for footy. The Herald Sun publishes seven days a week, with a bumper Sunday Herald Sun edition on Sundays, and breaks stories 24/7 across its digital channels – from mobile to tablet, desktop to social media. We reach 4.348m people in print and digital every month* with an additional audience across social media of more than 1.2 million.
Publication Day: Monday to Saturday

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The Age

Newspaper Name : The Age
About Us: The Age is a daily newspaper in Melbourne, Australia, that has been published since 1854. Owned and published by Nine Entertainment, The Age primarily serves Victoria, but copies also sell in Tasmania, the Australian Capital Territory and border regions of South Australia and southern New South Wales. Readership Total 5.321 million, Digital 4.849 million, Print 1.198 million (EMMA, March 2020)
Publication Day: Monday to Saturday

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Cobden Times

Newspaper Name : Cobden Times
About Us: Cobden is town of some 1,400 people and is in the heart of the rich Heytesbury dairy farming area. Cobden boasts the largest dried milk processing factory in the Southern Hemisphere and claims to be the dairy capital of the Australia. Farming enterprises include dairying, sheep and wool, with the availability of natural gas attracting more business with the expansion of Bonlac Foods and Ausfeed Feed Mill creating work opportunities. Dairying, sheep, fat lambs, tourism
Publication Day: Wednesday

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Warrnambool Standard

Newspaper Name : Warrnambool Standard
About Us: The Standard is ACM’s trusted voice of Victoria’s south-west. The Standard is based in Warrnambool but covers a vast area that extends to Portland and the South Australian border in the west to Colac in the east and The Grampians in the north.

When William Fairfax and Henry Laurie started The Standard in 1872, Warrnambool was a bustling but small port town with a population of only 4350.

More than 150 years later, Warrnambool, located where the Princes Highway meets the Great Ocean Road, is a thriving city of more than 35,000 that attracts thousands of tourists each year, as well as being home to a diverse and growing population.

The Standard has been and continues to be the major news source for people in south-west Victoria. Born during the exciting years of the 19th century when the gold rush riches were still pumping through the state’s economy, The Standard quickly progressed from a weekly to a tri-weekly and finally into a daily newspaper in 1884.

The growth of the newspaper mirrored the growth of the city of Warrnambool and the settlement of the region.

The Standard has documented, criticised, lauded, exposed and editorialised on the region’s traumas, tragedies, thrills and triumphs.

The Standard continues in its fine tradition while looking to the future. It was one of the first regional newspapers to embrace the internet, launching its site in 1996. Today, standard.net.au is the region’s most trusted website for local news, sport, entertainment and community information. We are digital, mobile and social with the power to share our stories. The Standard aims to help build the community, by keeping it strong, informed and connected, by delivering quality storytelling and photography.

Publication Day: Monday to Saturday

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