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cadena+melodía Latitude and Longitude:

4°37′57″N 74°04′02″W / 4.632505°N 74.067185°W / 4.632505; -74.067185
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Cadena Melodía is a Colombian radio network, founded in 1971 by Liberal politician Efraín Páez Espitia, [1] who owned Radio Melodía of Bogotá since 1959.

Stations

  • Melodía Estéreo: AM station in Bogotá, devoted to easy listening music. Until July 2012, when Cadena Melodía leased it to Caracol TV ( Bluradio), it was located in the FM band.
  • Radio Líder: AM stations devoted to news and general programming (the Bogotá station is defunct since July 2012)
  • Bogotá Estéreo (defunct): tropical music. [1] In the 1980s was sold to an evangelical group, which later would make an exchange agreement with RCN Radio. [1] Under RCN, it would become a bolero station, [1] and then youth-oriented station La Mega.

References

  1. ^ a b c d Gil Bolívar, Fabio Alberto (1992). "Influencia política y poder económico en los medios de comunicación: las cadenas radiofónicas colombianas" (PDF). Revista CIDOB D'Afers Internacionals (in Spanish) (23–24). Barcelona: 225–254. ISSN  1133-6595. Retrieved 2011-05-16.

4°37′57″N 74°04′02″W / 4.632505°N 74.067185°W / 4.632505; -74.067185



cadena+melodía Latitude and Longitude:

4°37′57″N 74°04′02″W / 4.632505°N 74.067185°W / 4.632505; -74.067185
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Cadena Melodía is a Colombian radio network, founded in 1971 by Liberal politician Efraín Páez Espitia, [1] who owned Radio Melodía of Bogotá since 1959.

Stations

  • Melodía Estéreo: AM station in Bogotá, devoted to easy listening music. Until July 2012, when Cadena Melodía leased it to Caracol TV ( Bluradio), it was located in the FM band.
  • Radio Líder: AM stations devoted to news and general programming (the Bogotá station is defunct since July 2012)
  • Bogotá Estéreo (defunct): tropical music. [1] In the 1980s was sold to an evangelical group, which later would make an exchange agreement with RCN Radio. [1] Under RCN, it would become a bolero station, [1] and then youth-oriented station La Mega.

References

  1. ^ a b c d Gil Bolívar, Fabio Alberto (1992). "Influencia política y poder económico en los medios de comunicación: las cadenas radiofónicas colombianas" (PDF). Revista CIDOB D'Afers Internacionals (in Spanish) (23–24). Barcelona: 225–254. ISSN  1133-6595. Retrieved 2011-05-16.

4°37′57″N 74°04′02″W / 4.632505°N 74.067185°W / 4.632505; -74.067185



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