XHTVL-TDT

XHTVL-TDT
Villahermosa, Tabasco
Branding Canal 9
Channels Digital: 30 (UHF)
Virtual: 13
Owner Albavisión
(Tele-Emisoras del Sureste, S.A. de C.V.)
Founded 1980
Call letters' meaning Tabasco ViLlahermosa
Former channel number(s) 9 (analog and digital virtual, 1980-2018)
Former affiliations Televisa (to 2017)
Transmitter power 160 kW[1]
Height 119 m
Transmitter coordinates 17°57′17″N 92°56′57″W / 17.95472°N 92.94917°W / 17.95472; -92.94917
Website canal9tabasco.com

XHTVL-TDT is a television station in Villahermosa, Tabasco. XHTVL broadcasts on virtual channel 13 (physical channel 30) and is currently an independent station.

History

XHTVL's concession was awarded on April 23, 1980. The station broadcast on analog channel 9. At the time, Tele-Emisoras del Sureste was owned by Remigio Ángel González, a Mexican-born entrepreneur who would later accumulate media holdings elsewhere in Latin America, as well as radio station owner Francisco Javier Sánchez Campuzano and Manuel Efraín Abán Méndez, who had placed the winning application for the frequency in 1979, beating out Jorge Kanahuati Gómez and Fernando Laurencio Pazos de la Torre.[2][3] In 1987, Sánchez Campuzano exited the partnership, as well as his stake in Comunicación del Sureste, a parallel company that owned XHDY and XHGK television in Chiapas.[3]

Regional expansion began not long after. On April 24, 1984, Abán Méndez received the concession for XHTOE-TV channel 12 in Tenosique, which would repeat XHTVL's programming in the southeastern region of Tabasco. In 1993, XHTOE's concession was transferred to Tele-Emisoras del Sureste. In 1985, the Patronato para Instalar Repetidoras de Canales de Televisión de Coatzacoalcos, Veracruz, A.C., a noncommercial group, obtained the permit for XHCVP-TV channel 9 in that city. XHCVP, while a social station, operates as a repeater of XHTVL, and in 2016, it was legally represented by lawyers associated with Albavisión.[4]

XHTVL maintained a partnership with Televisa and carried programming from its channel 9 network and FOROtv, and as a Televisa partner, Tele-Emisoras del Sureste is defined as within the "preponderant economic agent" in broadcasting for regulatory purposes. In 2014, XHTVL sourced 82 percent of its broadcast day from Televisa.[5] In 2017, simultaneous events prompted XHTVL to disaffiliate from Televisa. One was the unwinding of many local relationships as Televisa began to multiplex Gala TV on subchannels of its own TV stations in some areas of the country where said programming had been broadcast on a local station, including Villahermosa. Another was the successful participation of Telsusa Televisión México, S.A. de C.V., a company also controlled by Remigio Ángel González, in the IFT-6 television station auction, in which it acquired TV stations in twelve cities primarily in southern and eastern Mexico.[4] On October 18, 2018, XHTVL and XHTOE, as well as their sister stations in Chiapas, moved to virtual channel 13.[6]

Programming

XHTVL produces Notinueve local newscasts, considered the most important in Tabasco television, which air at 7:30am, 3pm and 9pm.[7][8] Among the most notable on-air personalities of the station was Juan Carlos Huerta, who anchored the late edition of Notinueve.[4] Huerta, a journalist who also hosted a radio show and founded XEGMSR-AM radio, was murdered in a robbery in May 2018.[8] It also locally produces a two-hour midday magazine, Revista de Hoy, on weekdays, and a music show known as Tu Música (Your Music).

Since disaffiliating from Televisa, most of XHTVL's entertainment programming has come from Albavisión television channels in other countries, such as El show del problema and the Argentina version of Combate (produced by El Nueve in Argentina) or been acquired on the international market, such as the Colombian telenovela Lo que diga el corazón. Weekends are taken up by older Mexican movies.[7]

Repeaters

XHTVL-TDT has two satellite stations, one of which has a repeater of its own:[1][9]

Station City RF
channel
Virtual
channel
ERP HAAT Transmitter coordinates
XHTOE-TDT Tenosique 26 13 55.002 kW 190.3 m 17°24′44″N 91°29′32″W / 17.41222°N 91.49222°W / 17.41222; -91.49222 (XHTOE-TDT)
XHTOE-TDT Palenque, Chiapas 26 13 1.2 kW -58.2 m 17°30′30.1″N 91°58′35.7″W / 17.508361°N 91.976583°W / 17.508361; -91.976583 (XHTOE-TDT Palenque)
XHCVP-TDT Coatzacoalcos, Veracruz 20 9 1 kW 50.55 m 18°08′03″N 94°26′15″W / 18.13417°N 94.43750°W / 18.13417; -94.43750 (XHCVP-TDT)

References

  1. 1 2 Instituto Federal de Telecomunicaciones. Infraestructura de Estaciones de TDT. Last modified 2018-05-16. Retrieved 2015-07-24. Technical information from the IFT Coverage Viewer.
  2. "SOLICITUD de Concesión en favor del C. Manuel Efraín Abán Méndez, para instalar, operar y explotar una estación televisora comercial en Villahermosa, Tab". Diario Oficial de la Federación. 7 March 1979. Retrieved 8 October 2018.
  3. 1 2 Aroche Aguilar, Ernesto (16 August 2017). "El magnate de los medios en Centro y Sudamérica extiende su red de televisión por México". Animal Político. Retrieved 8 October 2018.
  4. 1 2 3 Sosa Plata, Gabriel (22 August 2017). ""El Fantasma" en la TV mexicana". SinEmbargo. Retrieved 8 October 2018.
  5. IFT: Resolution P/IFT/EXT/060314/77, 6 March 2014
  6. XHTVL promo on channel change to 13
  7. 1 2 XHTVL Program Schedule - October 1-7, 2018
  8. 1 2 "Testigo desmiente a la Fiscalía de Tabasco sobre el presunto asesino del periodista Juan Carlos Huerta". Etcétera. 26 September 2018. Retrieved 8 October 2018.
  9. Instituto Federal de Telecomunicaciones. Listado de Canales Virtuales. Last modified 2018-05-31. Retrieved .
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