XENET-AM

XENET-AM
City Mexico City
Broadcast area Greater Mexico City
Frequency 1320 kHz
First air date December 1, 1942
Power 20 kW day
10 kW night[1]
Owner Emisora 1320, S.A. de C.V.

XENET-AM is a radio station in Mexico City. Located on 1320 kHz, XENET-AM is owned by Emisora 1320, S.A. de C.V. The station has been off the air since 2008, when a strike occurred.

History

The concession for 1320 AM in Mexico City was originally awarded to Carmen Gutiérrez Trejo, with the callsign of XEAI.[2] The station was eventually sold to Corporación Nacional de Radio y Televisión, S.A.[3] and became part of Grupo Radio Centro. In 1974, the station became XECMQ-AM and "Radio Sensación", broadcasting ballad music in Spanish. In 1993, "Formato 21", a news format, replaced it.

In 1997, 1150 AM swapped callsigns and formats with 1320 AM, with this frequency becoming XEJP-AM and taking on 1150's longtime "Radio Variedades" format.

In a 1998 contract, Grupo Radio Centro announced the transfer of XEJP-AM 1320 and XEFAJ-AM 1560 (now XEINFO-AM) to José Gutiérrez Vivó, journalist and producer of the Monitor newscast, then heard on Radio Centro's XERED-AM and XHRED-FM. Infored took over operation of the station in April 2000 and relaunched it in November of the same year, hoping to reach a young audience as "Track 13-20" with a rock format. In 2004, however, Radio Centro and Monitor parted ways, and this station became XENET-AM with the name Radio Bienestar, offering self-help and motivational programming.

From 2006 to 2008, XENET-AM simulcasted XEINFO-AM. However, in June 2007, the legal fighting between Radio Centro and Monitor, which had severely hurt the latter's finances, forced the suspension of programming of both 1320 and 1560 AM from June 29 until September 3 (during that time, both stations only aired instrumental music and occasional news updates). Radio Centro was owed more than $100 million.[4] On April 10, 2008, XEINFO broke off because an attempted sale of that station was made to a creditor, Eduardo Henkel Rojas, but the sale could not be completed because workers of STIRT, Mexico's radio and television labor union, went on strike. On May 23, 2008, STIRT, whose members were angry about unpaid wages,[4] raised its red and black flags at Radio Monitor, and both stations went off the air. The station's last program was the noon edition of Monitor hosted by Héctor Jiménez Landín, who in the last minutes of the newscast read a statement announcing the strike and total suspension of programming, thanking the audience for almost 34 years of listening to Monitor.

References

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