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Headquarters of the liberated Parisian - Paris 2nd

Patrimoine classé
Paris

Headquarters of the liberated Parisian - Paris 2nd

    124 Rue Réaumur
    75002 Paris
Siège du Parisien libéré - Paris 2ème
Siège du Parisien libéré - Paris 2ème
Siège du Parisien libéré - Paris 2ème
Siège du Parisien libéré - Paris 2ème

Timeline

XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1900
2000
22 août 1944
Foundation of the liberated Parisian*
1947
Conversion into a public limited company
17 octobre 1961
Algerian Massacre in Paris
1986
Renamed *The Parisian*
2015
Purchase by LVMH (Bernard Arnault)
2017
Moving to 10 boulevard de Grenelle
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Key figures

Émilien Amaury - Founder (1944–1977) Controversial leader, "huge" currency on the info
Claude Bellanger - Director General in 1944 Resistant, newspaper co-founder
Philippe Amaury - Director (1983–2006) Modernizes the title, launches *Today in France*
Bernard Arnault - Owner since 2015 (LVMH) Injects funds, accelerates digital
Maurice Papon - Police Commissioner (1961) Supported by the newspaper during the massacre
Marie-Odile Amaury - President (2006–2013) Veuve de Philippe Amaury, directs the transition

Origin and history

The liberated Parisien was founded on August 22, 1944 by Émilien Amaury and the resistors, replacing Le Petit Parisien forbidden for collaboration. His first title announces: "The victory of Paris is on!", three days before the Liberation. The newspaper adopts a generalist editorial line based on various facts and local news, with a controversial motto: "Information must not be accurate, it must be enormous". In 1947, he became a public limited company and created the Grand Prix Vérité to reward lived stories.

In the 1960s, the daily newspaper, very read in the Parisian suburbs, took part in "French Algeria" during the Algerian war. He used anti-Muslim stereotypes and minimized police violence, as in the massacre of 17 October 1961, where he supported Prefect Maurice Papon. This period marks its anchoring to the right, Gaullist, before a gradual refocusing from the 1980s.

The crisis of the 1970s hit the newspaper hard: strikes, the fall of the readership (from 682,000 to 303,000 copies between 1975 and 1977), and the closure of the historic printing house of Saint-Ouen in 2015. In 1986, Philippe Amaury (son of the founder) renamed Le Parisien, launched a national edition (Today in France in 1994) and modernized the editorial line, abandoning extremist positions. The newspaper focuses on proximity and services, becoming the first regional daily in Île-de-France.

Purchased in 2015 by Bernard Arnault's LVMH group, the newspaper undergoes restructuring plans and an accelerated digital transition. Despite annual losses of €20 million on average, it receives public subsidies (€1.7 million in 2024). In 2017, the headquarters moved to 10 boulevard de Grenelle (Paris 15e), symbolizing its evolution towards a hybrid model, between local and national press.

The Parisian remains marked by controversies, such as accusations of censorship (refusal to chronicle Merci Patron! in 2016, critic of Bernard Arnault) or his treatment of the Yellow Gilets and riots of 2023. By 2024, it exceeded 100,000 digital subscribers, thanks to the Olympic Games, but envisaged a new divestment, raising fears about its editorial independence.

External links