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The auditorium was badly damaged in the magnitude 7.2 Baja California earthquake. [2] The auditorium, built in 1985, received international attention as the venue for the final boxing match to have been scheduled for 15 rounds, which took place on August 4, 1988, a match broadcast on USA Tuesday Night Fights .
Baja Prog is an annual progressive rock festival in Mexicali, Baja California, Mexico, held since 1997. It draws a number of well-known bands in the genre, and an average of 1500 attendees each day. It draws a number of well-known bands in the genre, and an average of 1500 attendees each day.
Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; ... Mexicali, Baja California; Mexico; Frequency: 105.9 MHz 790 kHz: ... XHSU-FM/XESU-AM is a combo radio station in ...
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]
XEPRS (1090 kHz) is an AM commercial radio station licensed to Playas de Rosarito, a suburb of Tijuana in Baja California, Mexico. It broadcasts an Oldies and Spanish Catholic radio format . The station can be heard across the San Diego-Tijuana , Los Angeles - Orange County , Riverside - San Bernardino and areas of Southern California .
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. XHBC-TDT remained on digital channel 47, initially mapped to channel 3 via PSIP.
In 1974, Cadena Baja California (now known as Grupo Cadena) bought XEWV-AM-FM. After 27 years of regional Mexican music as Fiesta Mexicana, on September 9, 2011, XEWV-FM flipped to the More FM format, which debuted in Tijuana on sister station XHMORE-FM in 1994.
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 ...