Miguel Ángel Capriles Ayala

Miguel Ángel Capriles Ayala (28 February 1915, Puerto Cabello - 25 April 1996) was the head of Venezuela's Cadena Capriles media group.

Capriles launched Últimas Noticias in 1941, after the pro-freedom measures implemented by Venezuelan President Medina Angarita. In 1956 Capriles Ayala acquired the newspaper La Esfera. On 3 February 1958, shortly after the end of the dictatorship of Marcos Pérez Jiménez on 23 January 1958, Capriles launched El Mundo, which for most of its existence was the only Venezuelan evening newspaper. La Esfera which was sold in 1966. In 1959 he bought the magazine Élite. In 1962 he acquired the magazines Venezuela Gráfica and Páginas (the latter of which folded in 1999); in 1966 he founded Diario Crítica in Maracaibo, which closed in 1990; in 1968 he founded the Suplemento Cultural to Últimas Noticias; in 1969 he founded the sports daily Extra (which folded a year later). In 1970 he founded Dominical, the Sunday magazine of Últimas Noticias, and the magazin Hipódromo; in 1972 he bought Kena (folded in 1999) and founded Kabala and Alarma (folded in 1973); in 1974 he founded the Maracaibo newspaper El Vespertino, which folded in 1982. In 1988 he founded Guía Hípica, which folded in 2007. Following the death of Capriles Ayala in 1996 taken over in 1998 by his son, Miguel Ángel Capriles López.[1] La Cadena Capriles founded in 2005 URBE and the sports publication Líder and acquired Urbe Bikini. In 2009, it founded El Mundo Economía y Negocios. Other media enterprises currently owned by La Cadena Capriles include La Cadena Multicolor and PlanetaurbeTV.

According to Michael Coppedge, in 1968 a deal was struck by Copei on behalf of Rafael Caldera, promising Miguel Angel Capriles a Senate seat and the right to designate eleven Congressional candidates, in exchange for favourable coverage in the 1968 Venezuelan presidential election.[2] Capriles was elected to the Venezuelan Senate in 1968 on COPEI's party list and seven Capriles nominees were elected to the Venezuelan Chamber of Deputies, including the editor of El Mundo, Pedro Ramon Romero.[3] Capriles Ayala's brother, the journalist and historian Carlos Capriles Ayala, was named Ambassador to Spain.[4]

Family

Miguel is the father of Tanya Capriles Brillembourg, who is a renowned art collector, owner of the gallery exhibition space called Ideobox in Miami, and Board of Trustees member for the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, the New World Symphony in Miami Beach, and the Museo Reina Sofia in Madrid and the grandfather of David Brillembourg who is the Director of the Babson College Latin American Institute and is an advisor to the SaludArte Foundation and a prominent entrepreneur with over 20 years’ of experience working with developing companies that take advantage of market opportunities in emerging technology.

Books

  • Memorias de la inconformidad, 1973
  • Siempre habrá Venezuela, Editorial Domingo Fuentes, 1985
gollark: Oh. Huh.
gollark: What is it doing?
gollark: Do they contain errors?
gollark: Does it matter if your error generation takes a few hours? Simply do not make errors.
gollark: It makes sense and yet it's so weird.

References

  1. Cadena Capriles, Evolución Histórica Archived 2013-02-18 at the Wayback Machine
  2. Coppedge, Michael (1994), Strong Parties and Lame Ducks: Presidential Partyarchy and Factionalism in Venezuela, Stanford: Stanford University Press, pp35-36
  3. St Petersburg Times, 4 December 1968, "Tanks Guard Jittery Caracas After Election"
  4. (in Spanish) EFE, La Vanguardia, 5 July 1969, "El nuevo embajador de Venezuela en Espana, don Carlos Capriles, define los propositos de su alta mision"
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