XHTV-TDT explained

Callsign:XHTV-TDT
Branding:N+ Foro
Digital:15 (UHF)
Virtual:4
Subchannels:4.1: N+ Foro
4.2: CV Directo
Location:Mexico City, Mexico
Callsign Meaning:XH TeleVisión
Sister Stations:XEW-TDT, XHGC-TDT, XEQ-TDT, Televisa Regional
Owner:Grupo Televisa
Licensee:Televimex, S.A. de C.V.
Former Channel Numbers:Analog


4 (VHF, 1950-2015)
Digital:
49 (UHF, 2005-2018)

Former Callsigns:XHTV-TV (1950-2015)
Coordinates:19.5896°N -99.1154°W
Licensing Authority:IFT
Erp:270 kW
Repeater:RF 15 Ixtapaluca, State of Mexico[1]

XHTV-TDT (channel 4) is a Mexican television station, serving Mexico City as the flagship relay of the N+ Foro channel. The station is owned-and-operated by locally based Grupo Televisa alongside XEW-TDT, XHGC-TDT and XEQ-TDT carrying Las Estrellas, El 5* and NU9VE respectively, all four channels are run by TelevisaUnivision, which Grupo Televisa owns a majority stake in the company, Foro itself is operated by Triton Comunicaciones, which was Televisa's news division prior to the 2022 split.

Prior to 2010, channel 4 was a general entertainment network, carrying a variety of programs throughout its existence. Beginning that year, the Televisa Networks-owned Foro TV moved to channel 4, effectively dropping all non-news programming and as a result, Foro TV's oversight was moved to Televisa's broadcast division. The station is the first television station in Mexico and the oldest television channel in said country and Latin America.[2]

History

XHTV was Mexico's first television station and one of the building blocks of Telesistema Mexicano, which became Televisa in 1973.

Romulo O'Farril received the concession for XHTV in 1949, granted to Televisora de México S.A., owned by Novedades, O'Farril's existing newspaper. The station received equipment starting in March 1950, ending with the delivery of a mobile studio in July that year.[3] Test broadcasts started on July 5.[4] Its facilities were located at the National Lottery Building, the highest in the city at the time. Around 2,000 sets picked up its signal.[5] Its broadcasts started on September 1 with the live coverage of the annual presidential message to the opening of the Congress,[6] followed by regular programming from 5pm (the first program being Teatro de la Fantasía) to 7:30pm, which included an extended news bulletin with comments of the presidential ceremony.[7] The official inauguration, however, took place the previous day, on August 31, with a "artistic musical" program from the Jockey Club of the Hipódromo de las Américas with the participation of the Secretary of Communications, Agustín García López. Initially, it aired regular programming for two hours a day each evening,[8] from 5pm to 7pm, with longer programming on Sundays from 4pm to 7pm.[9] In order to increase its production capacities, the station moved to two new premises in 1951, with studios at Bucareli street number 4 and Balderas street.

An American survey from a correspondent to TV-Radio Life magazine in 1952 said that O'Farrill's programs were "poorly produced", that the films seen on the station were older than in the United States at the time and that the quality of the technical staff was "questionable", paling in contrast to XEW.[10] At the end of the year, XHTV triumphed over XEW in theatrical performances and remote broadcasts, but lost its grip on operatic broadcasts when XEW's program presented by Raúl Chávez beat XETV's analog in the second half of the year.[11]

In 1955, XHTV became a part of Telesistema Mexicano,[12] and, as consequence, it moved to the new Televicentro facilities shared by the three stations.[13]

In 2001, XHTV began using the name 4TV with a program lineup targeted at the Mexico City area; from January 2003 it adopted a new logo and the slogan "El Canal de la Ciudad" (The City Channel).[14] For the 2009-2010 season of the channel, its morning program Matutino Express increased its length by one hour and Ellas con estrellas moved to an 11am timeslot. Its former late afternoon slot was filled by canned programming.[15]

On August 30, 2010 (sixty years after the channel was founded), the channel's name was changed to FOROtv (literally "Forum TV"), with most of Televisa's news programs moved here, such as Las Noticias por Adela (from XEQ), and with new news and talk programs being created. Prior to this, the channel, under the name of "Canal de la Ciudad" ("The City's Channel"), broadcast programs targeted at Mexico City's metro area, as well as reruns of American series and blocks of Mexican movies.

Under this format, the channel seeks to emulate the success achieved by its predecessor ECO (which operated from 1988 to 2001). It competes in a crowded cable news space with such channels as TV Azteca's adn40 and Azteca Noticias, Telefórmula, Efekto TV, CNN en Español, Excélsior TV, and Milenio Televisión, among others.

Digital television

Digital subchannels

The station's digital channel is multiplexed:

Short name Network Programming
4.1 XHTV Main XHTV-TDT programming
4.2 XHTV CV Shopping Shopping channel

Analog-to-digital conversion

XHTV, along with other Mexico City TV stations, shut off its analog signal on VHF channel 4, on December 17, 2015, at 12:00 a.m., as part of the federally mandated transition from analog to digital television. The station's digital signal remained on its pre-transition UHF channel 49, using PSIP to display XHTV's virtual channel as 4 on digital television receivers.

In October 2016, XHTV added shopping channel CJ Grand Shopping as subchannel 4.2; this channel was deleted in March 2019 and replaced in June with a new CV Shopping channel wholly owned by Televisa.

On November 3, 2018, XHTV relocated from channel 49 to 15 to allow the 600 MHz band to be used for mobile services. It was the last station to repack in Mexico City.

Current programs

Original productions

Some of the programs on XHTV as Foro TV currently include the following:

Sports events

Previous programming

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: RPC: #056917 Shadow XHTV Ixtapaluca. IFT Public Concessions Registry. September 9, 2021. March 12, 2022.
  2. http://html.rincondelvago.com/historia-de-la-television-en-el-mundo-y-en-mexico.html History of Mexican TV (in Spanish)
  3. Web site: Radio and Television Maintenance . July 1950 . 13 September 2024 . 28 .
  4. Web site: Television Digest . 24 June 1950 . 13 September 2024 . 15 .
  5. Web site: Electronics . September 1950 . 13 September 2024 . 130 .
  6. Web site: Radio Electronics . November 1950 . 13 September 2024 . 14 .
  7. Revista Tele*Guia. Edición Especial 40 aniversario. Tomo I. August 1992. Page 76.
  8. Web site: Electronics . October 1950 . 13 September 2024 . 62 .
  9. Web site: Televiser . November 1950 . 13 September 2024 . 12 .
  10. Web site: TV-Radio Life . 11 April 1952 . 13 September 2024 . 7 .
  11. https://books.google.pt/books?id=4F9EAAAAIBAJ&pg=PA4 La Televisión Tuvo Grandes Éxitos en México Durante el Año de 1952, La Opinión, 13 January 1953
  12. https://web.archive.org/web/20070528042519/http://www.mexicanadecomunicacion.com.mx/Tables/FMB/foromex/minima.html Historia mínima de la televisión mexicana (1928-1996)
  13. Boletín Radiofónico, number 62, March 31, 1955
  14. Web site: Televisa se publicita . 14 January 2003 . 14 September 2024 . https://web.archive.org/web/20140820025622/https://www.merca20.com/televisa-se-publicita/ . 20 August 2014 .
  15. Web site: Canal 4 está de manteles largos; su programación cambiará, los detalles con Javier Poza y Esteban Arce . 21 August 2009 . 14 September 2024 . https://web.archive.org/web/20240914131501/https://wradio.com.mx/radio/2009/08/21/sociedad/1250876760_865260.html . 14 September 2024 .