Mexican public TV network
Canal Catorce
(Channel 14, formerly known as
Una Voz con Todos
) is a national public television network of
Mexico
, operated by the
Sistema Publico de Radiodifusion del Estado Mexicano
(SPR). It began operations in 2012 and is distributed via the SPR's national digital transmitter network, as well as on all cable and satellite providers. It is based in
Mexico City
.
History
[
edit
]
The
Organismo Promotor de Medios Audiovisuales
, or OPMA, was the predecessor to the SPR. It was founded with the aim of extending the breadth and depth of public television in Mexico. Two national-level public television stations were already on the air ?
XEIPN-TV
, established in 1959, and
Canal 22
, established as public/cultural in 1993 ? but they were not available outside Mexico City except through pay television and select programs carried by the public television stations in the various states, as well as Canal Once's few existing retransmitters. Outside Mexico City, XEIPN had a national penetration of 28%, and XEIMT had 22% reach.
Furthermore, in 2005, the
teveunam
network (not to be confused with
XHUNAM-TDT
) owned by the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM) began its broadcast as a Pay TV-only channel.
On March 31, 2010, an official decree published in the
Official Gazette of Mexico
created OPMA.
[1]
OPMA created a new public television channel, initially called Canal 30 TV Mexico, to serve as its flagship programming source. Initially, OPMA's first transmitters outside Mexico City
The first four transmitters for the system began operations in 2010. The Mexico City transmitter, XHOPMA-TDT (now
XHSPR-TDT
) channel 30, launched on March 23, 2012.
[2]
With this new transmitter, the Canal 30 network launched. The name was changed to
Una Voz con Todos
in 2012 to reflect that outside Mexico City, it was usually on other channel numbers.
In October 2016, all SPR transmitters were assigned virtual channel 14 for Una Voz con Todos; as a result, cable providers, who are required to carry the channel, placed it on channel 14. On November 13, 2017, the name of the channel was changed to
Canal Catorce
(Channel 14) to reflect its over-the-air and cable channel position.
Programming
[
edit
]
Programming on Canal Catorce is largely of a cultural and educational nature with the aim of strengthening democratic values in Mexican society.
In 2019, the SPR and Canal Catorce for the first time took the lead in producing coverage of
Independence Day
events, which were aired on all Mexican television stations.
Sports
[
edit
]
In January 2014, Una Voz con Todos acquired the rights to broadcast the
2014 Winter Olympics
and
Paralympics
through a contract made between SEGOB and
America Movil
.
[3]
Later that year, the SPR followed up by signing a deal with the same company to carry the
2014 Youth Summer Olympics
and the
2016 Summer Olympics
. Una Voz Con Todos produced independent coverage of the event along with other public broadcasters. Since then Channel 14 thus has been serving as Mexico's principal home of Olympics coverage co-shared with Channel 11.
Transmitters
[
edit
]
Since October 27, 2016, all
SPR transmitters
carry the network on virtual channel 14.1.
[4]
In August 2017, the SPR began broadcasting Canal Catorce to the state of Morelos via a subchannel of IPN-operated
Canal Once
transmitter XHCIP-TDT, also using virtual channel 14.1.
References
[
edit
]
External links
[
edit
]