请输入您要查询的百科知识:

 

词条 List of television stations in Mexico
释义

  1. Aguascalientes

  2. Baja California

  3. Baja California Sur

  4. Campeche

  5. Chiapas

  6. Chihuahua

  7. Coahuila

  8. Colima

  9. Mexico City

  10. Durango

  11. Guanajuato

  12. Guerrero

  13. Hidalgo

  14. Jalisco

  15. State of Mexico

  16. Michoacán

  17. Morelos

  18. Nayarit

  19. Nuevo León

  20. Oaxaca

  21. Puebla

  22. Querétaro

  23. Quintana Roo

  24. San Luis Potosí

  25. Sinaloa

  26. Sonora

  27. Tabasco

  28. Tamaulipas

  29. Tlaxcala

  30. Veracruz

  31. Yucatán

  32. Zacatecas

  33. See also

  34. Notes

  35. References

__NOTOC__

Mexico has 872 separately licensed television stations authorized by the Federal Telecommunications Institute.{{mexico-inf|TV|accessdate=2015-08-19}}[1]{{mexico-VC|accessdate=2016-11-10}}

Commercial stations are primarily operated by Televisa, TV Azteca, Grupo Imagen, Grupo Multimedios and their affiliate partners. There are six major national commercial channels, two of which are almost exclusively available over-the-air as subchannels:[2]

  • Azteca Uno (103 total stations)
  • Las Estrellas (129 total stations)
  • Canal 5 (97 total stations)
  • Azteca 7 (103 total stations)
  • ADN 40
  • a+

The so-called "third network", Imagen Televisión, is not yet considered a major network since most of its stations are not on the air yet, with only 48 transmitters of the 123 licensed in operation as July 2018.

There are also local stations and regional networks which take programs from Televisa, stations carrying its Nu9ve network which commonly shares time with local programming, and Televisa Regional stations, which incorporate programming from various Televisa networks alongside local news and magazine programs. Multimedios Televisión operates a regional network concentrated in northeastern Mexico, and a handful of independent stations operate primarily in regions along the border.

Noncommercial stations are divided into public and social concessions. Public concessions are predominantly owned by federal and state governments and public institutions of higher education. The two largest public networks are Canal Once, owned by the Instituto Politécnico Nacional, and the multiplexed transmitter network of the Sistema Público de Radiodifusión del Estado Mexicano (SPR), which offers multiple public television services. 27 of the 32 states also operate their own state networks, some of which have dozens of low-power transmitters. Social concessions are held by private universities, civil associations, and some individuals.

In addition, due to Mexico's rugged terrain, many stations operate low-powered, mostly co-channel translators (legally known as equipos complementarios de zona de sombra) to serve areas shielded by terrain, to improve signal reception in fringe areas, or (in some cases) to serve completely different television markets. Translators may be in different states from their parent stations; a handful even operate as local stations in their own right with their own local programs.

The list demonstrates the legacy of large television station concessions awarded in the 1980s and early 1990s. The two most notable of these were awarded to Televisa; the 1982 concession of 95 television stations in small communities is responsible for the bulk of the Canal de las Estrellas network, while the concession of 62 stations to Radiotelevisora de México Norte, a subsidiary of Televisa, was awarded in the early 1990s and expanded the Canal 5 and Gala TV networks. Since the conversion to digital, Televisa and Azteca have multiplexed transmitters in rural areas, bringing full national network service to smaller communities for the first time.

In March 2015, Grupo Imagen (under the name Cadena Tres I, S.A. de C.V.) and Grupo Radio Centro won concessions for 123 new television stations each, forming two new national television networks. The new networks must meet a minimum coverage standard set by the IFT for 2018 and reach full national coverage by 2020.[3] However, Grupo Radio Centro refused to pay its winning bid of 3.058 billion pesos and thus had its concession revoked.[4] Imagen's network, Imagen Televisión, launched on October 17, 2016 with a presence in nearly every state.

Analog stations were shut off beginning on July 18, 2013, with a pilot transition in Tijuana. In 2015, stations went digital-only throughout the country on 10 dates. Some 129 analog television stations owned by noncommercial entities, such as state governments, and another 368 repeaters of primarily Televisa stations, received exemptions to delay their transition until December 31, 2016.

Virtual channels were assigned by the IFT in 2016, unifying most transmitters of national networks under one number and ending decades of old analog channel numbers. In some cases, local stations were required to find new virtual channels.

{{horizontal TOC|nonum=yes|align=center}}{{Complete list|date=March 2016}}

Aguascalientes

{{Transcluded section|List of television stations in Aguascalientes}}{{#section-h::List of television stations in Aguascalientes|List of television stations}}

Baja California

{{Transcluded-section|List of television stations in Baja California}}{{#section-h:List of television stations in Baja California|List of television stations|List of television stations}}

Baja California Sur

{{Transcluded section|List of television stations in Baja California Sur}}{{#section-h::List of television stations in Baja California Sur|List of television stations}}

Campeche

{{Transcluded section|List of television stations in Campeche}}{{#section-h::List of television stations in Campeche|List of television stations}}

Chiapas

{{Transcluded section|List of television stations in Chiapas}}{{#section-h::List of television stations in Chiapas|List of television stations}}

Chihuahua

{{Transcluded section|List of television stations in Chihuahua}}{{#section-h::List of television stations in Chihuahua|List of television stations}}

Coahuila

{{Transcluded section|List of television stations in Coahuila}}{{#section-h::List of television stations in Coahuila|List of television stations}}

Colima

{{Transcluded section|List of television stations in Colima}}{{#section-h::List of television stations in Colima|List of television stations}}

Mexico City

{{Transcluded section|List of television stations in Mexico City|part=yes}}{{#section-h::List of television stations in Mexico City |List of television stations}}

Durango

{{Transcluded section|List of television stations in Durango}}{{#section-h::List of television stations in Durango|List of television stations}}

Guanajuato

{{Transcluded section|List of television stations in Guanajuato}}{{#section-h::List of television stations in Guanajuato|List of television stations}}

Guerrero

{{Transcluded section|List of television stations in Guerrero}}{{#section-h::List of television stations in Guerrero|List of television stations}}

Hidalgo

{{Transcluded section|List of television stations in Hidalgo}}{{#section-h::List of television stations in Hidalgo|List of television stations}}

Jalisco

{{Transcluded section|List of television stations in Jalisco}}{{#section-h::List of television stations in Jalisco|List of television stations}}

State of Mexico

{{Transcluded section|List of television stations in the State of Mexico}}{{#section-h::List of television stations in the State of Mexico|List of television stations}}

Michoacán

{{Transcluded section|List of television stations in Michoacán}}{{#section-h::List of television stations in Michoacán|List of television stations|List of television stations}}

Morelos

{{Transcluded section|List of television stations in Morelos}}{{#section-h::List of television stations in Morelos|List of television stations}}

Nayarit

{{Transcluded section|List of television stations in Nayarit}}{{#section-h::List of television stations in Nayarit|List of television stations}}

Nuevo León

{{Transcluded section|List of television stations in Nuevo León}}{{#section-h::List of television stations in Nuevo León|List of television stations}}

Oaxaca

{{Transcluded section|List of television stations in Oaxaca}}{{#section-h::List of television stations in Oaxaca|List of television stations}}

Puebla

{{Transcluded section|List of television stations in Puebla}}{{#section-h::List of television stations in Puebla|List of television stations}}

Querétaro

{{Transcluded section|List of television stations in Querétaro}}{{#section-h::List of television stations in Querétaro|List of television stations}}

Quintana Roo

{{Transcluded section|List of television stations in Quintana Roo}}{{#section-h::List of television stations in Quintana Roo|List of television stations}}

San Luis Potosí

{{Transcluded section|List of television stations in San Luis Potosí}}{{#section-h::List of television stations in San Luis Potosí|List of television stations}}

Sinaloa

{{Transcluded section|List of television stations in Sinaloa}}{{#section-h::List of television stations in Sinaloa|List of television stations}}

Sonora

{{Transcluded section|List of television stations in Sonora}}{{#section-h::List of television stations in Sonora|List of television stations}}

Tabasco

{{Transcluded section|List of television stations in Tabasco}}{{#section-h::List of television stations in Tabasco|List of television stations}}

Tamaulipas

{{Transcluded section|List of television stations in Tamaulipas}}{{#section-h::List of television stations in Tamaulipas|List of television stations}}

Tlaxcala

{{Transcluded section|List of television stations in Tlaxcala}}{{#section-h::List of television stations in Tlaxcala|List of television stations}}

Veracruz

{{Transcluded section|List of television stations in Veracruz}}{{#section-h::List of television stations in Veracruz|List of television stations}}

Yucatán

{{Transcluded section|List of television stations in Yucatán}}{{#section-h::List of television stations in Yucatán|List of television stations}}

Zacatecas

{{Transcluded section|List of television stations in Zacatecas}}{{#section-h::List of television stations in Zacatecas|List of television stations}}

See also

  • List of Mexican television networks
  • Television in Mexico

Notes

1. ^"Cuadro Estadístico de Distribución de Estaciones Mayo 2018, Federal Telecommunications Institute, May 16, 2018
2. ^"Poblaciones con señales de televisión radiodifundida obligatorias a servir por concesionarios televisión restringida vía satélite", Federal Telecommunications Institute {{es}}, accessed 2 January 2018. Imagen TV is not currently listed because, as a network with less than 50% national reach, under Mexican law it is not covered by the "must-offer/must-carry" system.
3. ^{{cite news|first=Miguel|last=Pallares|title=Radio Centro y Cadena Tres ganan nuevas televisoras|work=El Universal|date=2015-03-11}}
4. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.bmv.com.mx/eventore/eventore_586862_1.pdf|title=BMV "Relevant Event" release, 10 April 2015|website=bmv.com.mx|deadurl=yes|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20150618133322/http://www.bmv.com.mx/eventore/eventore_586862_1.pdf|archivedate=18 June 2015|df=}}
5. ^http://mapasradiodifusion.ift.org.mx/CPCREL-web
[5]

References

{{reflist}}{{Mexican broadcast television}}{{NAmerTV}}{{DEFAULTSORT:List Of Television Stations In Mexico}}

2 : Television stations in Mexico|Lists of television channels in Mexico

随便看

 

开放百科全书收录14589846条英语、德语、日语等多语种百科知识,基本涵盖了大多数领域的百科知识,是一部内容自由、开放的电子版国际百科全书。

 

Copyright © 2023 OENC.NET All Rights Reserved
京ICP备2021023879号 更新时间:2024/9/21 19:05:14