XEITE-AM

Summary

XEITE-AM is a radio station in Mexico City, broadcasting on 830 kHz. The station is known as Radio Capital, broadcasting adult contemporary music and talk programming, and is owned by Capital Media.

XEITE-AM
Frequency830 kHz
BrandingRadio Omega
Programming
FormatChristian Talk
Ownership
Owner
  • Capital Media
  • (Radiodifusoras Capital, S.A. de C.V.)
OperatorIglesia Universal del Reino de Dios
History
First air date
July 5, 1940 (1940-07-05)
Former call signs
XELA-AM (1940-2002)
Call sign meaning
Imagen TElecomunicaciones (owner until 2004)
Technical information
ClassB
Power25,000 watts (day)
5,000 watts (night)[1]
Transmitter coordinates
19°22′26.6″N 99°06′34.2″W / 19.374056°N 99.109500°W / 19.374056; -99.109500
Links
Websitewww.radiocapital.mx

History edit

XELA-AM edit

XELA-AM began broadcasting on July 5, 1940,[2] with a classical music format. For many years it was one of the few sources of classical music available to ordinary Mexican citizens. XELA was able to acquire quality sound recordings from the United States, England and France, even though it started with a very low budget, through an exchange program for Mexican music recordings. The station was acquired by Grupo Imagen in 1963.

From the 1970s to the mid-1980s, the station simulcast on XELA-FM 98.5. That station was split off in the mid-1980s. One long-running feature of the station was La hora sinfónica Corona, the dinner hour symphony which aired continuously for 59 years.[2]

The station was threatened with closure in 2000, but protests by listeners from laborers to the intelligentsia keep it open for a while longer. Their slogan was "Buena música desde la Ciudad de México!" ("Good music from Mexico City!").

XEITE-AM edit

On January 2, 2002, Imagen dropped the classical music format for sports, as "Estadio W 830" (a format now found on XEX-AM) and changed the callsign to XEITE-AM. The change resulted in protests from the station's dedicated listeners; some Mexican cultural figures, including Elena Poniatowska, José Luis Cuevas, Vicente Quirarte and Víctor Hugo Rascón, formed the "National XELA Rescue Committee" (or CONAREXELA) on July 10 of that year.[3] The group sought for the Instituto Mexicano de la Radio to take over the station, but IMER refused, saying it would incorporate that format into its own XHIMER-FM 94.5.

In 2004, the station was sold to Grupo Radio Capital (now known as Capital Media). The Radio Capital format included news and sports programming as well as contemporary music.

At 7 p.m. on February 14, 2019, Radio Capital in Mexico City ceased operations to make way for the relocation of the Quiéreme romantic format from Grupo Siete from 1440 XEEST-AM, which shares transmission facilities with XEITE.

In December 2019, the station switched to Christian programming under the name "Ondas de Paz". On February 14, 2020, Ondas de Paz moved back to 1440 and Capital resumed programming the 830 frequency.

On March 1, 2021, the religious format Radio Omega entered, after the discarded alliance with Grupo Radio Centro.

References edit

  1. ^ Instituto Federal de Telecomunicaciones. Infraestructura de Estaciones de Radio AM. Last modified 2018-05-16. Retrieved 2014-12-23. Technical information from the IFT Coverage Viewer.
  2. ^ a b Whaley, Jaime (2001-12-30). "Agoniza la XELA; trasmitió durante 60 años buena música". La Jornada. Retrieved 2020-11-12.
  3. ^ Acosta Nieto, Anasella (July 10, 2002). "Instituyen el Conarexela, bandera de la sociedad civil". La Jornada.
  • Correa, Guillermo (2002) "El rescate de XELA: exige la comunidad intelectual al gobierno" (XELA's rescue: intellectual community's demand from government) Proceso Cisa Comunicacion e Informacion (Oct 6, 2002): pp. 86–89;
  • Alatorre, Antonio et al. (Oct 2002) "Días de radio: la desaparición de la XELA ha reducido al mínimo la oferta de huena música en la radio mexicana, avasallada por una oralidad buera: Seis radioescuchas refinados participan en una especie de oración fúnebre por la estación que los educó y preparó para afrontar la estridencia del mundo" (Radio days: XELA's closure has been a blow to music radio broadcasting in Mexico: Six devoted listeners sing the praises of a radio station that was part of their lives" Letras Libres 4(46): pp. 56–58;