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Radio Corazón 97.3 FM VHF; Radio Fuego 107.7 FM VHF; Sonso Mix 92.5 FM VHF (Sonsonate) Radio La Libertad 98.1 FM VHF (La Libertad) Radio Megahits 92.5 FM VHF (Ahuachapán) Mi Radio 98.1 FM VHF (San Vicente) Radio Jiboa 90.5 FM VHF (San Vicente)
MVS Radio are a group of four international Spanish-language radio networks owned by the mass media conglomerate MVS Comunicaciones.The group of radio networks consists of Exa FM, La Mejor FM, Globo and MVS Noticias and are broadcast in a various Latin American countries including Argentina, Costa Rica, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico and the United States.
Category: Radio in El Salvador. 2 languages. Español; ... Club de Radio Aficionados de El Salvador; R. Radio Venceremos This page was ...
A reconstruction of Radio Venceremos, at the Museo de la Palabra y la Imagen, San Salvador. Radio Venceremos (Spanish; in English, "'We Shall Overcome' Radio") was an 'underground' radio network of the anti-government Farabundo Martí National Liberation Front (FMLN) during the Salvadoran Civil War.
The Club de Radio Aficionados de El Salvador (CRAS) (n English, El Salvador Amateur Radio Club) is a national non-profit organization for amateur radio enthusiasts in El Salvador. Key membership benefits of the CRAS include a QSL bureau for those amateur radio operators in regular communications with other amateur radio operators in foreign ...
Canal 10, previously known as Televisión de El Salvador (TVES) (in Spanish: El Salvador Television) is El Salvador's public television service with the YSTVE signal. It was founded by the Government of El Salvador on November 4, 1964 with channels 8 and 10.
Canal 4 is a Salvadoran television channel owned by Telecorporación Salvadoreña which broadcasts on channel 4 nationwide. It has a general schedule similar to its sister channels on weekdays and focuses more on sports during weekends.
Television in El Salvador began in 1956 in black and white on YSEB-TV, which would bring attention to the radio broadcasting industry in the 1960s. It was so much so that it was part of the Salvadoran Association Broadcasting (ASDER) in 1964 to confront stagnation, in response to the political crisis during the era of military authoritarianism.