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XESPN-AM

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
XESPN-AM
Broadcast areaSan Diego-Tijuana
Frequency800 kHz
BrandingNorte 800 AM
Programming
FormatSpanish adult hits
Ownership
Owner
  • Grupo Cadena
  • (Mario Enrique Mayans Camacho)
OperatorEsquina 32
XEBG-AM, XHMORE-FM
History
First air date
April 27, 1965 (1965-04-27)
Former call signs
XEMMM-AM
Call sign meaning
Station formerly broadcast ESPN Radio
Technical information
ClassB
Power500 watts (day)
250 watts (night)
Links
Websitenorte800.mx

XESPN-AM 800 is a radio station that serves the Tijuana-San Diego area. It is operated by Esquina 32. It airs a Spanish-language adult hits music format known as Norte 800 AM.

800 AM is a Mexican clear-channel frequency on which XEROK-AM in Ciudad Juárez is the dominant Class A station.

History

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Logo used as an ESPN Radio affiliate

The station came on air in April 1965 as XEMMM-AM, named for its owner, Mario Marcos Mayans. The Mayans family owned Cadena Baja California (CBC, later Grupo Cadena), which ran XEMMM from 1965 to 2022. The station initially broadcast during the daytime only.

XEMMM joined ESPN Radio in late 2002, replacing XETRA, which had changed from sports radio to adult standards some months earlier. In 2003, the call sign changed to XESPN. (The XEMMM calls were moved to a station Cadena Baja California then owned in Mexicali, now XEMMM-AM 940.) In 2009, ESPN Radio moved to sister FM station XHMORE while XESPN joined ESPN Deportes Radio.

On November 1, 2010,[1] CBC ceased sports programming on XESPN and adopted a news/talk format programmed by Grupo Imagen. ESPN Deportes Radio is now available in the San Diego-Tijuana border region on XESS-AM 620. Imagen's news programming was later replaced on XESPN with programming from Radio Fórmula.

On May 22, 2022, XESPN-AM went off the air, and its programming was moved to online only.[2] It did not begin coming back on the air until April 2023, after the Cadena stations were sold to a consortium related to Tijuana news website Esquina 32.

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References

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  1. ^ "Cadena Baja California". cbc.com.mx. Archived from the original on 2019-01-30. Retrieved 2019-01-30.
  2. ^ Venta, Lance (May 23, 2022). "San Diego Targeting Mexican Licenses Move Online Only". RadioInsight.

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