Misplaced Pages

Media of Macau

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

Part of a series on the
Culture of Macau
History
People
Languages
Cuisine
Festivals
Religion
Music and performing arts
Media
Sport
Symbols

Media in Macau are available to the public in the forms of: television and radio, newspapers, magazines and the Internet. They serve the local community by providing necessary information and entertainment. Macau's media market is rather small. The local media face strong competition from Hong Kong.

Macau reportedly has the highest "media density" in the world – nine Chinese-language dailies, three Portuguese-language dailies, three English-language dailies and half a dozen Chinese-language weeklies and one Portuguese-language weekly. About three dozen newspapers from Hong Kong, mainland China, Taiwan and the Philippines are shipped to Macau every early morning.

Print media

There are nine Chinese daily newspapers, three Portuguese dailies and two English daily newspapers in Macau. There are also six Chinese weekly newspapers and two Portuguese weekly newspapers.

All local newspapers that have been published for at least five years are entitled to subsidies from the government.

The first newspaper published in Macau was A Abelha da China (Chinese: 蜜蜂華報), which was only published for one year from 1822 to 1823.

Revista Macau is a quarterly magazine with cultural contents and run by the government. Macau Business is Macau's oldest English language publication, launched in May 2004, published monthly by a private company (De Ficção – Multimedia Projects) that also owns Business Intelligence Magazine a business magazine in Chinese, and Essential Macau a bilingual (Chinese/English) luxury magazine, "Macau News Agency", the first independent news agency available online and "MB.tv", and online video news platform; Inside Asian Gaming is a monthly gaming magazine, in English. World Gaming is an English and Chinese language magazine promoting the gaming and tourism sector.

Broadcast media

Chinese-language
television
Main articles:
Regulatory agency

State Administration of Press,
Publication, Radio, Film,
and Television
(China)


Communications Authority (Hong Kong)


Government Information
Bureau
(Macau)


Infocomm Media Development
Authority
(Singapore)


National Communications
Commission
(Taiwan)
Censorship
See also
Chinese-language TV channels

TDM (Macau) – Teledifusão de Macau, S. A. , provides public broadcasting service in the Macau Special Administrative Region of China. By running five digital terrestrial TV channels, one satellite TV channel, two radio channels, TDM serves the audiences a wide range of contents in Macau's two official languages, Chinese and Portuguese.

Premium channels include:

Media administration

The government of Macau established the Government Information Bureau to regulate media broadcasting and provides support organizations related to this aspect. They are directly responsible to the chief executive of Macau. Freedom of the press is guaranteed under the Basic Law and Press Law of Macau.

The death of Lai Minhua, director general of the Macao Customs Service, and its subsequent reporting has been used as a case study on media use in Macau and in particular how mainstream media was reluctant to report on her death.

Reporters' organizations

There are five journalists' organizations in Macau.

Media education

The University of Macau offer degree courses in media studies.

The University of Saint Joseph offers a Communication and Media program that covers a wide range of media disciplines.

Internet

There are several major internet communities in Macau such as Macaustreet, CyberCTM, Qoos and Macauplus.

See also

References

  1. ^ "Macau media guide". BBC News. Retrieved 30 December 2024.
  2. Tang Io Weng (2022). "The Research History of A Abelha da China, China's First Foreign Newspaper". icm.gov.mo. Retrieved 30 December 2024.
  3. ^ "Media". Government Information Bureau of the Macao SAR. Retrieved 31 December 2024.
  4. Tong, Jingrong; Lo, Shih-Hung, eds. (2017). Digital Technology and Journalism: An International Comparative Perspective. Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-3-319-55026-8.
Macau Media of Macau
Media of Macau
Television
Free-to-air
TDM
Mainland channels
Premium
Radio
Newspapers
See also
China Television in China
Hong Kong Television in Hong Kong
Television broadcasting channels in China
Mainland
National
Big 12
Commercial
(National)
Other
Commercial
(National)
Non-Chinese
(National)
Hong Kong
Free-to-air broadcasters
Subscription platforms
Satellite channels
Macau
Free-to-air
Cable
Satellite
See also
Hong Kong Television in Hong Kong
Macau Television in Macau
Radio stations broadcasting in the Chinese language
Chinese-language radio in Canada
The following channels offer at least some programming in Chinese
Calgary
Edmonton
Montreal
Ottawa
Toronto
Vancouver
Radio in China
National
Regional
Hong Kong
Macau
China Radio Markets
Beijing
Fujian
Guangdong
Heilongjiang
Shanghai
Sichuan
Tianjin
Xinjiang
Zhejiang
See also
List of radio stations in China
Chinese-language radio in Malaysia
RTM
Cense Media
Media Prima
Astro Radio
KTS Group
Star Radio Group
Chinese-language radio in Singapore
Mediacorp
So Drama! Entertainment
SPH Radio
Radio stations in Taiwan
Government
Private
Chinese-language radio in the United States
The following channels offer at least some programming in Chinese
Honolulu
Houston
Los Angeles
New York
San Francisco
Overseas
Media of Asia
Sovereign states
States with
limited recognition
Dependencies and
other territories
Categories: