Natalio Botana


Natalio Félix Botana Miralles, was an Uruguayan journalist and entrepreneur, mostly known for having founded the Argentine newspaper Crítica in 1913. Published until 1962, Crítica was the most widely circulated newspaper in Latin America.
Botana was a pioneer of the sensasionalist media in Argentina, being considered as one of the most influential personalities of the 20th century in that country.
He also presided the Argentine Football Association during a brief period in 1926. by Miguel Arregui on El Observador, 12 Apr 2017

Biography

He was born into a family of landowners whose commercial activities were often affected by continued political wars that erupted between the country's political parties: White and Colorados.
When Botana arrived in Buenos Aires in 1911, he started to work in different newspapers until he was hired by La Razón, the main evening paper that sold 76,000 copies at the time. Two years later, at the age of 25, he founded his own newspaper, Crítica, which was a pioneer in the Argentine media with its a sensasionalist style. Crítica had also a wide coverage of news on the crime, focusing on information rather than opinion. Jorge Luis Borges, Enrique González Tuñón, Carlos de la Púa,Bernardo Verbitsky.
The basement of his house in Don Torcuato, a Buenos Aires suburb served in 1933 as the site for Plastic Exercise by exiled Mexican muralist David Alfaro Siqueiros.
Botana died in a car accident in 1941.

Personal life

Botana was married to the writer Onrubia Salvadora Medina, and his daughter Georgina was the mother of comedian and writer Raúl Damonte Botana, known by the pseudonym of Copi, who was a successful artist in France with his strip La femme assise, published during ten years on Le Nouvel Observateur.
His nephew is the famous political scientist Natalio R. Botana, who has written articles for La Nación.

Literary references