Magazines published in Argentina enjoyed higher levels of circulation in the 1990s. [1] However, their sales declined following the economic crisis in 2001. [1] In 2007 there were nearly 600 titles in the country. [1]
The following is an incomplete list of current and defunct magazines published in Argentina. They may be published in Spanish or in other languages.
María Susana Giménez Aubert, known as Susana Giménez, is an Argentine TV host, actress, model and businesswoman. In 2012, she was considered the biggest celebrity in Argentine television by the media firm that publishes her eponymous magazine.
Joaquín Salvador Lavado Tejón, better known by his pen name Quino, was an Argentine cartoonist. His comic strip Mafalda is popular in many parts of the Americas and Europe and has been praised for its use of social satire as a commentary on real-life issues.
Roberto Alfredo Fontanarrosa, known popularly as El Negro Fontanarrosa, was an Argentine cartoonist, comics artist and writer. During his extended career, Fontanarrosa became one of the most acclaimed historieta artists of his country, as well as a respected fiction and short story writer. He created two hugely popular comic strips, as well as their parodic protagonists: Inodoro Pereyra, a gaucho, and Boogie, el aceitoso, a gun-for-hire. He also created the comic book Los Clásicos según Fontanarrosa, which contained a selection of humorous parodies of universal literature mainstays originally published in the magazine Chaupinela, in the 1970s.
Jorge Lanata is an Argentine journalist and author. He founded the newspaper Página 12. He hosts Lanata sin filtro on Radio Mitre and Periodismo para todos on El Trece. He writes a column in Clarín.
Norma Aleandro is an Argentine actress. She is considered one of the most celebrated and prolific Argentine actresses of all time and is recognized as a cultural icon in her home country.
Felipe Pigna is an Argentine historian and writer. He is among the best-selling authors from Argentina.
Cristina Pérez is an Argentine television news journalist. Since 2002, she has worked alongside Rodolfo Barilli, as news anchor of Telefe's Telefe Noticias a las 20.
Alejandro Wiebe, also known as Marley, is an Argentine television host, comedian and producer.
Maitena Burundarena, better known as Maitena, is an Argentine cartoonist.
Ricardo Güiraldes was an Argentine novelist and poet, one of the most significant Argentine writers of his era, particularly known for his 1926 novel Don Segundo Sombra, set amongst the gauchos.
Argentine comics are one of the most important comic traditions internationally, and the most important within Latin America, living its "Golden Age" between the 1940s and the 1960s. Soon after, in 1970, the theorist Oscar Masotta synthesized its contributions in the development of their own models of action comics, humor comics and folkloric comics and the presence of other artists.
Rubens Osvaldo Jesús Udaquiola Laport is a Uruguayan-Argentine actor and UNHCR Goodwill Ambassador. In 2000, he earned Martín Fierro Award for his portrayal in television comedy Campeones de la Vida.
Cielos Argentinos is an Aerolíneas Argentinas magazine that incorporates material from Newsweek. It was started in 2009, and belongs to Sergio Szpolski's media group. The magazine is published by Editorial Group Veintitres.
Newsweek Argentina is an Argentine monthly news magazine, published as the local edition of Newsweek. Its editorial director was Alex Milberg, and its senior editor was Matías Loewy.
Jorge Horacio Brito was an Argentine banker and businessman. He was the CEO of Argentina's largest bank, Banco Macro. He was also the president and chairman of the Argentine Banking Association (ADEBA) from 2003 to 2016.
Editorial Atlántida is a prominent Argentine publishing house and the country's leading magazine publisher and distributor.
Events in the year 1879 in Argentina.
Ángel David Revilla Lenoci, better known as DrossRotzank or simply Dross, is a Venezuelan YouTuber and writer who has resided in Buenos Aires, Argentina, since 2007.
Fray Mocho was an Argentine weekly magazine that published general interest topics. Its first number was published on May 3, 1912, with historian and journalist Carlos Correa Luna being its first director. Fray Mocho's staff included former collaborators of Caras y Caretas who had left the magazine in disagreement with its editorial line.
Editorial Haynes was an Argentine publishing company founded by Alberto M. Haynes in 1904. The publisher released several magazines such as El Hogar, Mundo Deportivo, Mundo Argentino, Mundo Agrario, Mundo Infantil, and newspaper El Mundo, among other imprints.