The Bulletin (Belgian magazine)

Today it claims a monthly online audience of 150,000 unique readers[1] mostly from the large expatriate community of the European Union's capital.

By 1969, circulation had grown to 3,000, enabling yet another relocation of The Bulletin office to the Sablon area, above the Vieux St. Martin restaurant.

In 1971, one of The Bulletin's freelance writers, Sunday Times journalist John Lambert, encouraged by the then editor, Aislinn Dulanty, decided to launch a campaign to ban traffic in the Grand-Place.

Due to such positive campaigns as well as the expansion of the EEC and expatriate community in Brussels, Ackroyd Publications launched What's On, an entertainment guide, in 1975.

It had Cleveland Moffett's reflective Rambler columns covering many aspects of urban life, Dick Leonard explaining the nuances of Belgian politics and Geoff Meade's wry stories on living in Belgium with his Meadelets and catlets.

North Europe Save Radio 4 sent petitions and faxes until BBC agreed to keep the programme on long wave.

In 2007, Ackroyd Publications was acquired by Corelio, the Flemish media group now known as Mediahuis that publishes several Belgian dailies in both Dutch and French.

The announcement stated that due to changes in the market, including the role played by the internet, The Bulletin would no longer be a printed magazine but would continue as an online publication.