Radio Disney Latin America

Radio Disney Latin America is a pop music and rock music network owned by The Walt Disney Company, which is broadcast in several countries in Latin America. The station is aimed primarily at youth and adolescents.

Radio Disney
TypeRadio network
Country
AvailabilityInternational (Except Colombia, Cuba, El Salvador, & Venezuela)
HeadquartersOlivos, Argentina[1][2]
OwnerThe Walt Disney Company Latin America
(Walt Disney Direct-to-Consumer & International)
Launch date
2001 (Argentina)[2]
Affiliates17 (Full-time)
Official website
Official website (Generic)
Radio Disney Brazil

Availability

Radio Disney is available in Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Costa Rica, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Guatemala, Mexico,[3] Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Peru and Uruguay.

2019 Mexico breakup

On December 26, 2019, Disney and its Mexican partner, Grupo ACIR, announced they were mutually ending their relationship, which had covered twelve Mexican cities.[4] Ten of the twelve Radio Disney stations were transitioned to ACIR's replacement pop format, Match.[5] However, Radio Disney stated in a press release that it would return on new stations in 2020.[4] One article attributed the breakup to "three direct format competitors and an impressive surge in Spotify consumption in key market Mexico City."[6]. Radio Disney returned to the country on February 1, 2020, exclusively on Mexico City station XHFO-FM.

Stations

FrequencyLocationHD Radio
94.3Buenos Aires, ArgentinaY
91.3 (only in summer)Pinamar, Argentina[7]N
96.5San Lorenzo, ParaguayY
97.3Santo Domingo, Dominican RepublicY
101.1San José, Costa RicaY
92.9Guatemala City, Guatemala[8]Y
93.7Guayaquil, Ecuador[9]Y
93.7Santa Elena, Ecuador[9]Y
98.3Cuenca, Ecuador[9]Y
100.7Managua, NicaraguaY
104.9Santiago, Chile[10]Y
102.1Viña Del Mar, Chile[10]Y
101.5Panama City, PanamaY
91.3São Paulo, BrazilY
91.9Montevideo, Uruguay[2]Y
102.5La Paz, Bolivia[11]Y
98.7Santa Cruz, Bolivia[11]N
107.5 Cochabamba, Bolivia N
91.1Lima, Perú[12]Y
92.1Mexico City, MexicoN

Slogans

  • "Aquí está tu música" (former) ("Here is your music")
  • "Escucha eso que quieres sentir" (2008–present) ("Hear what you wanna feel")
  • "A rádio que te Ouve" (Brazil) (2010–present) ("The radio that listens to you")
  • "La radio que te escucha" (Mexico) (2013–2019) ("The radio that listens to you")[3]

Notes

See also

References


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.