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  1. 14 de ago. de 2011 · William Randolph Hearst lives on 60 years after his death as the mythical bogeyman of American journalism, the personification of the field's most egregious impulses. Hearst is typically ...

  2. Early years On April 29, 1863, William Randolph Hearst was born in San Francisco, California. He received the best education that his multimillionaire father and his sophisticated schoolteacher mother (more than twenty years her husband's junior) could buy—private tutors, private schools, grand tours of Europe, and Harvard College.

  3. BIOGRAPHY: William Randolph Hearst was born on April 29,1863. His father was a multi-millionaire miner named George Hearst. His mother was Phoebe Hearst, a school teacher from Missouri. While Hearst was a boy, his father traveled through the West becoming partners in three of the largest mining discoveries ever recorded in American history: the ...

  4. William Randolph Hearst. William Randolph Hearst ( San Francisco, 1863 - Beverly Hills, 1951) fou un periodista, editor, [1] publicista, empresari, inversor, polític i magnat de la premsa i els mitjans estatunidencs, que va emergir com un dels més poderosos personatges de l'escena política i empresarial d'aquest país. [2]

  5. William Randolph Hearst fue una de las personas más poderosas de los Estados Unidos. Empresario, político, pero sobre todo magnate de los medios, llegó a tener veintiocho periódicos de circulación nacional, los cuales utilizaba sin tapujos para manipular la opinión pública en favor de sus intereses comerciales y personales.

  6. William Randolph Hearst, son of wealthy U.S. Senator George Hearst and Phoebe Apperson Hearst, was born in San Francisco in 1863. Hearst's passion for journalism began when he was a young man.

  7. www.hearst.com › historyHistory | Hearst

    1887. On March 4, a 23-year-old William Randolph Hearst places his name on the masthead of the San Francisco Examiner as "Proprietor" for the first time, marking the beginning of Hearst Corporation.. 1896. With William Randolph Hearst’s encouragement, Richard Outcault develops “The Yellow Kid,” transforming a simple gag panel into the first true example of the comic strip.