According to the survey, B’Sheva reaches a total of 6.1% of Israeli adults, up a dramatic 3.8% since the previous poll was taken in the second half of 2003.
B’Sheva is now closing in on the readership of one of Israel’s leading dailies, Haaretz, a left-leaning newspaper favored by much of Israel’s intellectual, business and establishment elites. Weekend readership of Haaretz has dropped to 8.3%, down from 9.3% last year.
The weekend editions of Yediot Acharonot and Maariv also dropped. Yediot slipped from 54.8% to 53%, while Maariv tumbled from 32.1% to 28.6%.
B’Sheva has become the dominant newspaper in the religious and nationalist sectors, dwarfing the readership rates of Hamodia (2.3%), Yated Ne’eman (1.9%), Mishpachah (2.8%), and Makor Rishon (3.9%).
B’Sheva newspaper ranks as Israel’s third largest circulation publication, delivered free every week to 140,000 families.
TGI’s surveys are published twice a year and are Israel’s leading source of circulation data for advertisers and publishers.
B’Sheva is now closing in on the readership of one of Israel’s leading dailies, Haaretz, a left-leaning newspaper favored by much of Israel’s intellectual, business and establishment elites. Weekend readership of Haaretz has dropped to 8.3%, down from 9.3% last year.
The weekend editions of Yediot Acharonot and Maariv also dropped. Yediot slipped from 54.8% to 53%, while Maariv tumbled from 32.1% to 28.6%.
B’Sheva has become the dominant newspaper in the religious and nationalist sectors, dwarfing the readership rates of Hamodia (2.3%), Yated Ne’eman (1.9%), Mishpachah (2.8%), and Makor Rishon (3.9%).
B’Sheva newspaper ranks as Israel’s third largest circulation publication, delivered free every week to 140,000 families.
TGI’s surveys are published twice a year and are Israel’s leading source of circulation data for advertisers and publishers.