XELT-AM

XELT-AM is a radio station on 920 kHz in Guadalajara, Jalisco. It is known as Radio María and carries a Catholic religious format.

XELT-AM
CityHuentitán el Bajo, Guadalajara, Jalisco
Frequency920 kHz
BrandingRadio María
Programming
FormatCatholic religious
Ownership
OwnerTelevisa Radio
(Radio Tapatía, S.A. de C.V.)
OperatorFundación Cultural para la Sociedad Mexicana, A.C.
Sister stationsXHWK-FM, XEHL-FM, XEBA-FM, XEZZ-AM
History
First air dateApril 27, 1944
Technical information
Power10 kW day
1 kW night[1]
Links
Websitewww.radiomariamexico.com

The station's concession is held by Televisa Radio, but the station is operated by Fundación Cultural para la Sociedad Mexicana, A.C., the organization that owns all Radio María stations in Mexico. Radio María Mexico has its studios and national headquarters in Zapopan.

History

XELT signed on April 27, 1944, on 840 kHz, owned by J. H. Tostado Lomelí. It was later acquired by the Radio Comerciales group, making it sister to XEAD, XEHL, XEJE and XEBA.

In 1987, Radio Comerciales split in two; Francisco Javier Díaz Romo picked up XEZZ, XELT, XEBA-AM-FM and XEHL-AM-FM and operated them as Radio Comerciales de Jalisco. In 1992, Radiópolis, now known as Televisa Radio, bought the stations to mark its first holdings outside of Mexico City.

In 1992, the station became an early grupera format station known as La Sabrosita; this ended when XEBA-FM was relaunched as Ke Buena the next year and absorbed many of its DJs, and XELT evolved toward a tropical format. After a brief run as news-talk Frecuencia Libre, XELT became known as "Radio Escucha", with a strong schedule of local programming that rivaled even XEWK. This lasted until 1998, when the highest-rated programs moved to XEWK and the station picked up romantic music as RadioAmor.

In 2002, XELT flipped to religious music as Radio Oasis. A year later, on May 31, 2003, XELT became Radio María. It was the first Radio María station in Mexico.

gollark: It has a nice "portal to hell"-y aesthetic to it what with all the red.
gollark: "Once"? Wasn't that yesterday?
gollark: Hey, I'm not saying I'm not.
gollark: You're vaguely "privileged" in that you're in a country which can afford to do that.
gollark: Also, I suspect most people don't actually care very much. I mean, abstractly, if you ask people "would you like people to not get malaria/be cured of malaria", they'll say yes. But people generally do *not* really care enough to actually pay the various charities which are able to provide malaria nets and stuff, despite these being extremely effective at lives saved per $.

References

  1. Instituto Federal de Telecomunicaciones. Infraestructura de Estaciones de Radio AM. Last modified 2018-05-16. Retrieved 2015-10-18. Technical information from the IFT Coverage Viewer.


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