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Telemundo is an American Spanish-language broadcast television television network owned by NBCUniversal which was launched in 1984 under the name NetSpan. As of June 2018 [update] , the network currently has 28 owned-and-operated stations and current affiliation agreements with 66 other television stations. [ 1 ]
The following are lists of affiliates of the Telemundo television network: List of Telemundo affiliates (by U.S. state) List of Telemundo affiliates (table) See also
Telemundo is an American broadcast television television network owned by the Telemundo Television Group division of NBCUniversal, which was launched in 1984 as NetSpan. As of October 2015 [update] , the network currently has 18 owned-and-operated stations , and current affiliation agreements with 65 other television stations.
Between 1988 and 1993, Telemundo acquired or affiliated with television stations in Texas (KFWD channel 52, in Dallas–Fort Worth, now a ShopHQ affiliate), New Mexico (KTEL-CD channel 47, in Albuquerque), Arizona (KHRR channel 40, in Tucson) and Washington, D.C. (W64BW, channel 64; now WZDC-CD on channel 25). The new network started producing ...
The nation's second-largest commercial Spanish-language network, Telemundo has over 100 owned-and-operated and affiliate stations (including approximately 40 full-power stations); it is also available in Mexico and Puerto Rico (where it was founded in 1954 as the brand name for WKAQ-TV). Most Telemundo stations air local newscasts, primarily ...
Telemundo: satellite of KTEL-CD. H&I on 25.2, Charge! on 25.3, Telemundo on 25.4 Roswell/Carlsbad: Roswell: 27 27 KRPV-DT: GLC ~El Paso TX: Las Cruces: 48 26 KTDO: Telemundo: Inmigrante TV on 48.3 Albuquerque NM: Hobbs: 29 29 KUPT: Cozi TV: satellite of KUPT-LD ch. 16 Albuquerque
Telemundo Puerto Rico traces its history to June 1, 1993, when Telemundo Group (then owned by investment firm Reliance Capital) announced that it would launch a 24-hour Spanish-language cable news channel that would be distributed in Latin America, Spain and the United States.
Six television networks in Mexico have more than 75% national coverage and are thus required to be carried by all pay TV providers and offered at no cost by the broadcaster. Additionally, these networks are also required to provide accessibility for the hearing impaired with the use of Closed Captioning and/or Mexican sign language.