The Observer is a United Kingdom newspaper published on Sundays. It takes a liberal/social democratic line on most issues. Its daily sister paper is The Guardian.
In 1911, William Waldorf Astor, 1st Viscount Astor (1848-1919) purchased The Observer from the Harmsworth family. It remained a Tory paper, as it had always been, until 1942, with the end of the 34-year editorship of J. L. Garvin. After his time, it declared itself non-partisan, an unusual stance for the time.
Ownership passed to the 2nd Viscount, Waldorf Astor, who in turn passed it on in 1948 to his sons, one of whom, David Astor (1912-2001), would be the paper's editor for 27 years. David Astor turned the paper into a trust-owned newspaper employing the likes of George Orwell. Under Astor's editorship the Observer became the first national newspaper to oppose the government's 1956 invasion of Suez, a move which cost it many readers. In 1977, the Astors sold the ailing newspaper to US oil giant Atlantic Richfield (now called ARCO) who sold it to Lonrho plc in 1981. Since June 1993, it has been part of the Guardian Media Group.
In 1990 Farzad Bazoft, a journalist for the Observer, was executed in Iraq on (false) charges of spying.
On 27 February 2005 The Observer Blog * was launched, making The Observer the first newspaper to purposely document its own internal decisions, as well as the first newspaper to podcast.
Each issue comes with a different free monthly magazine focusing, in rotation, on Sport, Music, Women and Food.
The Observer followed its daily partner The Guardian converted to 'Berliner' format on Sunday 8 January 2006 [http://www.guardian.co.uk/newsroom/story/0,11718,728489,00.html
British newspapers | Weekly newspapers | The Guardian
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