XHDQ-FM

Radio station in San Andrés Tuxtla, Veracruz
18°26′40″N 95°12′21″W / 18.44444°N 95.20583°W / 18.44444; -95.20583LinksWebcastListen live

XHDQ-FM is a radio station on 103.9 FM in San Andrés Tuxtla, Veracruz, Mexico. The station is owned by Grupo ACIR; it was the company's first station and, by 2022, its smallest-market property. Grupo ACIR ceased operating XHDQ-FM on June 29, 2022, as part of a retreat from three stations in southern Veracruz. The station was then sold to Quatro Media, a Xalapa-based station group owned by Carlos Ferráez, and returned to the air.

History

XEDQ-AM received its concession on July 22, 1961. It broadcast on 1400 kHz and was owned by Radio Ondas de los Tuxtlas, S.A. Two years later, on June 8, 1963, XEDQ was bought by Francisco Ibarra López, who in 1965 formed Grupo ACIR. By 1969, XEDQ had moved from 1400 to 1360; it would move to 830 sometime in the 1990s.

In 2010, XEDQ received authorization to move to FM.

In 2018, the station began using the Amor brand; it had already been using the format but branded as Radio Alegría with a retro logo calling to mind the ACIR logos of the 1980s, a nod to XEDQ's history as ACIR's first radio station.

Effective June 29, 2022, Grupo ACIR opted to shut down XHDQ-FM. The day before, XHOM-FM and XHNE-FM, the ACIR cluster in Coatzacoalcos, closed.[2][3] The closure of the cluster caused the loss of 17 jobs.[4]

On October 15 of the same year, a group led by Carlos Ferráez acquired XHDQ to be relaunched under the La Ke Buena grupera brand.

References

  1. ^ IFT Resolution P/IFT/140218/112: Technical Changes for 10 Radio Stations
  2. ^ Cancino, Karla (June 29, 2022). "Apagan 50 años de radio: Cierran Grupo ACIR en Coatzacoalcos y San Andrés Tuxtla". El Diario de Xalapa (in Spanish). Retrieved 2022-07-09.
  3. ^ Chiñas, Sayda (June 29, 2022). "Grupo Acir cierra dos estaciones". La Jornada Veracruz (in Mexican Spanish). Retrieved 2022-07-09.
  4. ^ Lara, Mildred (July 1, 2022). "17 personas perdieron su empleo por cierre de radiodifusora en el sur de Veracruz". Imagen de Veracruz (in Mexican Spanish). Retrieved 2022-07-09.
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Radio stations in the state of Veracruz
In-state regions
  • Coatzacoalcos—Minatitlán
  • Córdoba–Orizaba
  • Poza Rica—Tuxpan
  • Tampico/Pánuco
  • Veracruz City
  • Xalapa
Other areas
AM
  • XEFU 630
FM
Adjacent states
Chiapas
Hidalgo
Oaxaca
Puebla
San Luis Potosí
Tamaulipas
Tabasco
See also
List of radio stations in Veracruz
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