Media ownership in Colombia is highly concentrated. The four largest newspapers together account for two-thirds of total readership, and the two largest television channels have about two-thirds of the market and 78% of advertising revenues, according to a 2016 study by Reporters Without Borders and the Colombian Federation of Journalists. [1]
In total, three companies control 57 percent of the market in print, television and radio. The owners of the three companies, Luis Carlos Sarmiento Angulo, Carlos Ardilla Lülle and Alejandro Santo Domingo, are among the 200 richest people in the world, according to Forbes. [2]
Most popular media outlets in the country, in which the audience is concentrated, are privately owned. There are three state-owned television stations, but two private networks, Caracol and RCN, dominate viewership. Print media is all privately owned. [3]
Luis Carlos Sarmiento is the country's richest man, according to Forbes Magazine and controls a cluster of corporations in a broad spectrum of business such as financial, agricultural industry, mining industry, energy and gas, infrastructure, construction, and media. [4] He started his business in construction and, as the industry and his revenues grew bigger, he diversified to banking, media and other industries.
Sarmiento owns Casa Editorial El Tiempo, which controls more than 25 print and broadcast media outlets. [5] such as El Tiempo, one of the largest national newspapers, the ADN newspapers in regional cities, and CityTv.
Some other news outlets, like La Silla Vacía, have been critical of Sarmiento's role in the news industry.– particularly its coverage of political and economic issues. In 2011, La Silla Vacía outlined a number of conflicts of interest for the media group in covering Sarmiento's wide-ranging business holdings. [6]
In the words of Revista Semana’s columnist María Jimena Duzán, “there is practically no sector (banking, mining industry, construction, etc.) in which Grupo Sarmiento doesn’t have an economic interest”. [7]
La Silla Vacía gave some examples of El Tiempo's potential conflicts, especially regarding Grupo Aval, Sarmiento's bank holding company. On several occasions, El Tiempo has dedicated excessive coverage to news about the company, making the distinction between journalism and advertisement seem invisible, according to La Silla Vacia.[ citation needed ]
Carlos Ardila Lülle is also on the list of Colombia's wealthiest people. His holding company, Organización Ardila Lülle, controls about 50 companies in agricultural, industrial, communications, finance, insurance, real-estate and automobiles. One of the most important is the country's biggest sugar refinery, Incauca, and beverage company Postobon. In the media sector he's the owner of Colombian biggest broadcast station, Cadena RCN Radio and the TV channel with the greatest audience share, Canal RCN. [8]
His relationships with political actors are well known. Ardila Lülle's son is part of the board of directors of Organización Ardila Lülle and was also the Colombian ambassador to Spain between 1998 and 2001. Some independent media, like La Silla Vacía, attributed this appointment as payback for RCN's support of Andrés Pastrana’s presidential campaign.[ citation needed ]
He also contributed economically to Alvaro Uribe’s presidential campaign in 2002 as well as to his reelection in 2006. La Silla Vacía claims that among the first things Uribe did after reelection as president was to thank Ardila Lülle for his support. [9] After Uribe's term was over, the ex-president wanted to continue his legacy through his former Ministro del Interior, Juan Manuel Santos, who won the elections. For his second term, Santos lost Uribe's support, but continued to have Lülle's one. La Silla Vacía and other critical outlets have repeatedly said that RCN coverage of Santos's reelection was key to his victory, due to the huge impact the television channel has on the country [9]
Alejandro Santo Domingo is, according to Forbes, Colombia's second-richest person. His father, Julio Mario Santo Domingo, constructed an empire that culminated in the creation of Santo Domingo Group and Valorem, two of the country's most important holding groups. Together they control a variety of businesses in real estate, retailing, tourism, transport and entertainment. [10]
In the media industry, Santo Domingo Group owns Caracol Televisión, Comunican S.A and Inversiones Cromos S.A.S. It also owned until 2003 Caracol Cadena Radial, a radio broadcast network, until the Spanish company Prisa bought it. In order to regain its influence on the radio, Santo Domingo Group launched a new radio station, Blu radio, in 2012. [10]
The four most read-newspapers nationwide, Q’Hubo, ADN, El Tiempo and Al Día belong to four different companies. Q’Hubo is the main tabloid newspaper in Colombia and has 12 local editions. It is owned jointly by Grupo Nacional de Medios, a company that owns three large regional newspaper companies, [11] Galvis from Santander, Lloreda from Valle del Cauca and Gómez Hernández from Antioquia. Each of them are also owners of their own local newspapers.
The Lloreda family owns several local newspapers and magazines on the Valle del Cauca region and also the most important newspaper in the capital, Cali, El País. [12] The Lloredas have links to the right-wing Colombian Conservative Party as well as to the Asociación Colombiana de Petróleos, an oil company.[ citation needed ]
The Gómez Hernández family owns El Colombiano, a regional paper, and La República, one of the two business newspapers in Colombia. They have their own editorial group and a series of magazines. Their family has several links to the Conservative Party as well. [13]
The Galvis family is based in Santander, where they own the most-read local newspapers such as La Vanguardia Liberal and El Universal. Their family has links to the Partido Conservador.[ citation needed ]
El Tiempo is a nationally distributed broadsheet daily newspaper in Colombia launched on January 30, 1911. As of 2019, El Tiempo had the highest circulation in Colombia with an average daily weekday of 1,137,483 readers, rising to 1,921,571 readers for the Sunday edition.
RCN Televisión, branded as Canal RCN is a Colombian free-to-air television network owned by Organización Ardila Lülle. It was founded as a television production company on March 23, 1967, and officially launched as an independent channel on July 10, 1998. Its main shareholder is Carlos Ardila Lülle. It produced Yo soy Betty, la fea, one of the most successful Colombian telenovelas.
Todelar is a system of radio stations that covers all of Colombia, founded in 1953 by Bernardo Tobón de la Roche. Its flagship station is La Voz de Bogotá since 2017. Radio Continental, also in Bogotá, had this role until 2016, having joined Todelar in 1957.
Marta Noemí del Espíritu Santo Sanín Posada is a Colombian-born politician and diplomat. She was the Conservative party candidate in the 2010 Colombian presidential election.
Luis Carlos Sarmiento Angulo is a Colombian billionaire and the second wealthiest man in Colombia, with a net worth of US$10.3 billion, as of October 2021, that derives from the banking conglomerate Grupo Aval, of which he is the majority shareholder and chairman.
Juan Manuel Santos Calderón is a Colombian politician who was the President of Colombia from 2010 to 2018. He was the sole recipient of the 2016 Nobel Peace Prize.
Cambio is a Colombian-based social, political and economics magazine. Founded with the name Cambio 16 it was later sold and Cambio in 1998 to Nobel laureate Gabriel García Márquez and other associates. In 2006 the magazine was sold to "Casa Editorial El Tiempo", the owner of Colombia's El Tiempo newspaper. The magazine ceased publication in February 2010.
Presidential elections were held in Colombia on 26 May 2002. Álvaro Uribe, the candidate of the recently created Colombia First movement, was elected, receiving 53% of the vote by the first round. Uribe took office on 7 August.
Mass media in Colombia refers to Mass media available in Colombia consisting of several different types of communications media: television, radio, cinema, newspapers, magazines, and Internet-based Web sites. Colombia also has a national music industry.
La Silla Vacía is a Colombian news website founded by journalist and writer Juanita León in 2009. The site focuses primarily on Colombian politics.
Virginia Vallejo García is a Colombian author, journalist, television and radio director, anchorwoman, model, columnist, socialite, and political asylee in the United States of America.
Daniel Alfonso Coronell Castañeda is a Colombian journalist and Businessperson shareholder of the media Plural Comunicaciones. He has been news director for RCN, Noticias Uno, and president of Univision News, the news division of Univision, until August 1, 2021. In September 2021 he was appointed as president of the weekly news magazine Cambio. In October 2021, Coronell started working for W Radio Colombia.
Carlos Ardila Lülle was a Colombian entrepreneur and the founder and head of the Organización Ardila Lülle, a major Colombian conglomerate which controls companies such as RCN TV, the Postobon soft drink, and the Atlético Nacional football team. His estate's net worth is estimated at over $1.8 billion U.S. dollars.
Organización Ardila Lülle is one of the most important conglomerates in Colombia. After positioning his company in the beverage sector, Carlos Ardila Lülle founded and consolidated the Organización Ardila Lülle, today comprising over 80 companies with more than 40,000 employees in Colombia, producing goods and services in sectors as diverse as communications, beverages, textiles, and entertainment.
Federico Andrés Gutiérrez Zuluaga is a Colombian politician, civil engineer, who currently serves as the mayor of Medellín, having held this office previously from 2016 to 2019. Before being mayor, he had been a member of the Medellín municipal council from 2004 to 2011. A member of the Creemos Colombia party, Gutiérrez was the candidate for the 2022 Colombian presidential election as the winner of the primary of the conservative Team for Colombia coalition.
Enrique de Jesús Gil Botero is a Colombian politician and lawyer, who was a Magistrate of the State Council, rapporteur of the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, and a specialist in Administrative and Constitutional Law.
Claudia Nayibe López Hernández is a Colombian politician. She was a Senator of the Republic of Colombia and was the vice-presidential candidate in the 2018 presidential election for the Green Alliance party. In October 2019, she was elected mayor of Bogotá, the first woman and as well the first openly LGBT person to be elected to this position.
Carlos Holmes Trujillo García was a Colombian dynasty politician, diplomat, scholar, and attorney who served as minister of defense, foreign affairs, interior, and education. He also served as the mayor of Cali and as ambassador to the Organization of American States (OAS), the European Union, and a number of nations.