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Mexicali: Las Estrellas : 180 kW Televimex 17 3 XHCTME-TDT: Mexicali: Imagen Televisión (Excélsior TV) 150 kW [3] Cadena Tres I, S.A. de C.V. 14 4 XHBC-TDT: Mexicali: Televisa Regional 200 kW Televisora de Occidente 18 5 XHMEX-TDT: Mexicali: Canal 5 200 kW Radio Televisión 15 10 XHMEE-TDT: Mexicali: Nu9ve 200 kW Teleimagen del Noroeste 7 ...
The callsign was changed to XHBC-TV several years after the station's sign on. In 2014, Televisa Mexicali was consolidated with the rest of the Televisa stations in Baja California, bringing it under closer management to XEWT-TDT in Tijuana and XHS-TV in Ensenada. On March 26, 2015, all Mexicali television stations shut off their analog signals.
Gobierno del Estado de Baja California Sur 23 10 XHCPBC-TDT: La Paz TV Mar 112.85 kW Compañía Periodística Sudcaliforniana 14 XHCPCK-TDT: La Paz: Instituto Politécnico Nacional: 31 XHSPB-TDT: La Paz: Sistema Público de Radiodifusión del Estado Mexicano 22 7/1 XHSIB-TDT: San Ignacio: Azteca 7 (Azteca Uno) 1.08 kW Televisión Azteca 21 7/1 ...
XHILA-TDT (channel 66) is a Spanish-language independent television station in Mexicali, Baja California, Mexico, serving the Mexicali Valley and the southern Imperial Valley, including El Centro, California, and the Colorado River cities of San Luis Río Colorado, Sonora, and Yuma, Arizona. The station is also carried on the cable television ...
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XEWT-TDT (channel 12), informally called Tu Canal ("Your Channel"), is a television station in Tijuana, Baja California, Mexico, owned by TelevisaUnivision.XEWT's over-the-air signal also covers the San Diego–Tijuana region across the Mexico–United States border (and holds cable coverage in San Diego on Cox systems).
XHBJ's concession history began in the late 1960s with the initial award of the television station to Canales de Televisión Populares, a subsidiary of Telesistema Mexicano (today's Televisa). However, two parties objected to the concession award, which was announced in the summer of 1969: Tijuana FM, S.A., headed by Clemente Serna Alvear, and ...
XEYW-AM received its first concession on November 16, 1964. It was owned by Mario Marcos Mayans, the founder of Cadena Baja California and broadcast as a 250-watt daytimer. By the end of the decade, the call sign had been changed to XEMBC-AM. On May 22, 2022, all Grupo Cadena stations ceased broadcasting on AM, becoming online-only stations. [3]