XEDA-AM

{{short description|Radio station in Mexico City (1936–2015)}}

{{Infobox radio station

| name = XEDA-AM

| logo =

| city = Mexico City

| area = Greater Mexico City

| country = MX

| airdate = December 3, 1936

| last_airdate = May 31, 2015

| branding = Radio Trece

| frequency = 1290 kHz

| power = {{ubl|10,000 watts daytime|1,000 watts nighttime{{mexico-inf|AM|accessdate=2015-06-09}}}}

| class = B

| format = News/talk

| webcast =

| website =

| owner = Radio S.A.

| licensee = Carlos de Jesús Quiñones Armendáriz

}}

XEDA-AM was a radio station on 1290 AM in Mexico City. It began operations on December 3, 1936, and it was the flagship station of Radio S.A. with a news/talk format under the name Radio Trece. The station went off the air on May 31, 2015, and the concession expired on July 3, 2016.

History

The first concession for XEDA was awarded to Augusto García Díaz, for a station on 680 kHz. Not long after, it moved to its final 1290 kHz frequency.[https://rpc.ift.org.mx/vrpc/pdfs/090252648002ace1.pdf Renewal of XEDA-AM concession from 2004]

In 1953, the station was bought by Publicistas, S.A., the business of Guillermo Morales Blumenkron, which also obtained a concession for XEDA-FM (now separately owned). In 1991, it changed its name to Corazón Latino, using boleros and Caribbean rhythms in its programming. In 1992, it changed its format and was called Rock N' Radio, with oldies music in English. This was maintained until December 1993, when XEDA-AM was sold by Grupo Imagen to Radio S.A. and became Radio Trece with the news/talk format.

While Radio Trece programming continued online, the AM radio station was turned off on May 31, 2015. Radio S.A. cited the unprofitability of AM radio in its decision.[https://twitter.com/carlosradio13/status/605159603131678720 Tweet from @carlosradio13, Carlos Quiñones], 12 June 2015: "La salida del aire de Radio Trece 1290 a.m. Se debe estrictamente a temas financieros, no hay mercado para a.m." Radio S.A. also cited a lack of official advertising budget for AM radio stations in Mexico City, the unavailability of the AM band on newer radios, and poor sound quality, in its decision; it noted that it had to lay off 150 people "for being obligated to operate with obsolete technology".[https://pbs.twimg.com/media/CIwFAefWEAEEHAX.png Newspaper ad run in major Mexico City newspapers] on June 30, 2015 XEDA's concession was not renewed and expired on July 3, 2016.

References

{{reflist}}

{{Mexico City Radio}}

{{Clear Channel AM}}

{{coord missing|Mexico City}}

Category:Radio stations in Mexico City

Category:Defunct radio stations in Mexico

Category:Radio stations established in 1936

Category:Radio stations disestablished in 2015

{{Mexico City-radio-station-stub}}