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Hoy is a Mexican morning television show produced by Televisa and broadcast on Las Estrellas.Since its first broadcast, on August 3, 1998, the program had several stages. Being the longest-running program and the most watched on Mexican television in the morn
El Noticiero con Guillermo Ortega (1998-2000) El Noticiero con Joaquín López Dóriga (2000-2016) El Noticiero con Lolita Ayala (1998-2016) En Concreto (1997) En Contraste (2002 - 2004) En 1 Hora; Fuera de la Ley; Hora 21; Hoy Mismo; Las Noticias por Adela; Muchas Noticias (1987–1998) Noticias ECO (1988–2001) Nuestro Mundo (1986–1988 ...
Las Estrellas originated from XEW-TV, which began broadcasting on 11 March 1951. The channel was a sister station to the legendary XEW-AM radio station, owned by Emilio Azcárraga Vidaurreta , which was also the owner of the newly launched channel.
Las Estrellas - El Canal de las Estrellas nuestro canal; Canal 5 - #PorqueSí; Gala TV - Más de lo que sientes; FOROtv - Tú tienes la palabra; TV Azteca. Azteca 7 - Te damos de qué hablar; Azteca Uno - Todos somos uno; adn40 - Activa tu mente; Grupo Imagen. Imagen Televisión - Juntos Somos Libres; Grupo Multimedios. Multimedios Television ...
On 9 March 1994, Radiotelevisora de México Norte, S.A. de C.V., a subsidiary of Televisa, was authorized to build 62 new stations, including channel 57 in Nuevo Laredo, with the call sign XHNUL-TV. XHNUL and sister XHRTA-TV in Reynosa , however, did not sign on with Mexican programming.
XHUAA-TDT, virtual channel 19 (UHF digital channel 22), is a Las Estrellas television station in Tijuana, Baja California, Mexico, whose over-the-air signal also covers the San Diego–Tijuana region across the Mexico–United States border. The station is owned by the TelevisaUnivision.
Televisa Regional logo. Televisa Regional is a unit of Grupo Televisa which owns and operates television stations across Mexico. The stations rebroadcast programming from its subsidiary TelevisaUnivision's other networks, and they engage in the local production of newscasts and other programs.
The first television station in Monterrey, XHNL-TV, came to air on channel 10 September 1, 1955, with a presidential report from President Adolfo Ruiz Cortines. [1] XHNL broadcast from studios in two rooms of the Hotel El Mirador and a transmitter on Cerro del Topo Chico and carried a wide variety of films and TV series on film.