A great way to stay on top of the latest Brazilian events, while keeping up with your Portuguese!
There isn’t much to explain here; O Globo is a hugely popular newspaper in Brazil which is always worth reading. You can check it out online to get Brazilian news headlines quickly and easily.
For those of you who use RSS to read your news and website updates, check out this amazing page where Globo has its RSS feeds broken out by category. Example: Just curious about the Brazilian economy? This feed is for you!
Tags: brazil, news, brazilian, portuguese, newspaper


4 Comments
Oi,desejo ler seu otimo jornal,mas nao consigo
sendo Noruegues(nao tenho CPF etc. como pedem)
seu cadastro parece que eh so para residentes
do Brasil ???
Abracos Haroldo
Gritos e empurrões marcam reunião da BAUA em New Jersey
veja o video!
http://www.vejatv.com/show.php?fileid=9501
Herald, simply go to
ogloboonline.com.br and you can read the paper. You shouldn’t need the cpf.
‘O Globo’ is not the best way to know what is happening in Brazil. This is a newspaper that supported the 1964 military coup that overtrew a democratic elected president.
Its articles today are of a right-wing tendencies and one can confidently say that they seam to be edited in Wasgington DC.
It continuosly lies about the Bolivarian movement that has taken South America in the last decade, it demonizes its leaders (democraticly elected leaders) on a daily bases. In the next coming election, it shamelessly favors ‘Jose Serra’, a right wing cadidate who while governing Sao Paulo State, sent troops to shoot at teachers protesting poor conditions. Needless to say Washignton support him too. O Globo is not on the business of information, nor is on the business of democratic freedom. It is a big corporation and it comes with all the evils any corporation possesses.
The best way to learn portuguese from Brazil is reading its litarature:
‘Machado de Assis’
‘Jose de Alencar’
‘George Amado’
‘Clarice Lispector’
‘Mario de Andrade’
You can also read ‘The open Vains of Latin America’ by Edoardo Galeano. The original is in spanish, but its portuguese translation is excellent!
‘Boa Sorte’ reading o ‘Globo’!