Former American Spanish-language free-to-air television network
Television channel
Azteca America
(
Spanish pronunciation:
[as?teka]
, sometimes shortened to
Azteca
) was an American Spanish-language
free-to-air
television network
owned by
INNOVATE Corp.
, which acquired the network from the Azteca International Corporation subsidiary of
TV Azteca
.
[3]
Headquartered in New York City,
[4]
the network's programming was aimed at the
Hispanic and Latin American communities
in the United States
[3]
and had access to programming from TV Azteca's three television national networks in Mexico, including a library with over 200,000 hours of original programming and news content from local bureaus in 32 Mexican states.
[5]
[6]
Its programming consisted of a mix of
telenovelas
, drama series, news programming, and
reality
and
variety
series.
[7]
Azteca was available on
pay television
(primarily carried on dedicated Spanish language programming tiers, except in some markets with a free-the-air affiliate),
[8]
with local stations in over 60 markets
[9]
with large Hispanic and Latin American populations (reaching 89% of the Hispanic population in the U.S.
[10]
The network's former
flagship station
KAZA-TV
in
Los Angeles
(until January 2018) was the highest-rated station in Azteca's portfolio.
[11]
Azteca America ceased all operations on December 31, 2022.
History
[
edit
]
The network was formed through a programming alliance between Mexico-based broadcaster TV Azteca and
Visalia
,
California
-based television station owner
Pappas Telecasting Companies
announced on September 8, 2000; the two companies planned to launch a new Spanish language broadcast network during the second quarter of 2001, that would act as a competitor to established networks
Univision
and
Telemundo
. TV Azteca, which planned to own 20% of the network, contributed an exclusive programming agreement in the United States, Canada and
Puerto Rico
, while Pappas, which owned a majority 80% interest, planned to have stations it owned in ten markets ? three already owned by the network, and seven that Pappas was in the process of acquiring in
Nevada
,
Arizona
and
Texas
(most of which were
low-power
stations) ? serve as charter stations of the network, which was originally named
Azteca America
. Pappas and Azteca invested close to $500 million to start up the network, with an additional $450 million allocated for station acquisitions and a $129 million loan made by TV Azteca to Pappas. The network hoped to reach 65% to 70% of the Hispanic population in the U.S. by 2002.
[12]
[13]
[14]
TV Azteca, which was formed in 1993, launched the network to capitalize on its success with its two television stations in
Mexico City
?
XHDF-TV
(channel 13) and
XHIMT-TV
(channel 7), respectively branded as "Azteca Trece" and "Azteca Siete" ? which maintained a lineup of programs, including telenovelas and other
serialized dramas
with socially relevant themes, that helped it quickly grow to maintain a 36% ratings share during prime time against competition from the longer established and dominant
Televisa
networks. Azteca founder
Ricardo Salinas Pliego
had made previous attempts at entering into U.S. television during the late 1990s; it made a failed attempt to acquire an equity interest in
Telemundo
in 1998, but eventually agreed to a short-lived co-production and program distribution agreement with the network. In 1999, the network also tried to negotiate a joint venture with the upstart
Hispanic Television Network
;
CEO
Marco Camacho had also rejected an exclusive content agreement between HTVN and Azteca due to questions over the appeal of the latter's programming to Latino Americans, although a spokesman for TV Azteca stated that the network pulled out due to a lack of confidence in HTVN's overall national distribution.
[13]
On December 21, 2000, the Pappas-Azteca
joint venture
received approval from the
Federal Communications Commission
(FCC) to launch a full-power television station in
Los Angeles
,
California
(where it would base its headquarters), KIDN-TV (channel 54) ? which was later reassigned the call letters
KAZA-TV
prior to its launch. The network, through both companies, planned to acquire stations in twelve markets to serve as Azteca America's charter stations.
[15]
The plans for the network were eventually scaled down, as a slowdown of the world economy hurt Azteca America's plans to secure financing to purchase stations in
Dallas
(where Pappas-Azteca attempted to acquire
independent station
KXTX
, which was bought by Telemundo instead for $65 million) and
El Paso, Texas
. Also playing a factor was the December 2000 purchase of
USA Broadcasting
's thirteen major-market television stations by
Univision Communications
, which prevented the network from initially obtaining charter stations in major markets such as
New York City
and
Miami
; the Pappas-Azteca venture also called off a $37.5 million deal to purchase WSAH (now
WZME
) in
Bridgeport
,
Connecticut
from
Shop at Home
, Inc. (which would have given Azteca America a station in the New York City market) in November 2000.
[16]
[17]
KAZA-TV signed on the air as Azteca America's lone station on July 28, 2001, as part of a phased rollout cited by lower viewership during the summer months; Pappas also announced that it would switch some of its existing stations to Azteca America and attempt to purchase additional stations with the intent of affiliating them with the network.
[18]
[19]
In October 2001, TV Azteca announced that it would scrap plans to buy additional stations and instead distribute Azteca America's programming through agreements struck through prospective affiliates, with Pappas and TV Azteca sharing 50% ownership of the network.
[20]
Pappas Telecasting Companies gave up its majority stake in Azteca America in early 2002. The network eventually grew to nine affiliates by that September, reaching 28% of the Hispanic market, with stations added in markets such as
Reno
,
Nevada
;
Salt Lake City
,
Utah
;
San Francisco
; and
Sacramento
, California.
[21]
The network eventually gained an affiliate in the lucrative Miami market in November 2002, when it affiliated with
WPMF-LP
(channel 31);
[22]
this was followed later that year by WNYN-LP in New York City.
By the next year, Azteca America was reaching 52% of the U.S. Hispanic population. In 2003, the network covered 69% of the Hispanic audience; that number increased to 77% by 2004.
[23]
In the summer of 2006, the network relocated its corporate headquarters to the Los Angeles suburb of
Glendale
,
California
.
[4]
Also in April 2007, Pappas Telecasting Companies announced that it would discontinue its relationship with Azteca America, and disaffiliate the network from stations it owned in several markets (such as Houston and San Francisco). Pappas attempted to launch a new network from those stations,
TuVision
, made up of mainly acquired programming, to little success.
[14]
In May 2008, Azteca America announced that it would layoff about 30 employees in a cost-cutting measure amid a weak advertising market due to the
deepening recession
at the time.
[24]
An odd decision made by Azteca at this time was the launch of a
DirecTV
-exclusive companion channel known as
Azteca Mexico
, which aired on channel 442 next to Azteca America's channel 441 and carried a schedule of programming from
Azteca 7
,
Azteca Trece
and
adn40
combined into one schedule and often aired live with their Mexican sister channels, and in competition with Azteca America at times.
[25]
It was discontinued in October 2016 with
Estrella TV
assuming the channel 442 slot.
[26]
At the network's upfront presentation in New York City on May 13, 2014, the network announced that it would be changing its name to simply
Azteca
, citing that the change "reflects the network's core audience, an audience composed of the market segment that makes up the largest portion of the U.S. Hispanic market."
[27]
The network phased in the revised branding on-air later that month. Azteca has been inching up in market share against its larger competitors thanks to strategic changes spearheaded by president-CEO
Manuel Abud
, who was president of Telemundo's station group before joining Azteca in 2014.
Azteca lost several affiliates as part of the launch of
Fox Networks Group
/
RCN Television
's joint effort network
MundoFox
in fall 2013; however it gained several back and never lost much ratings ground by the time MundoMax ended operations in December 2016, a year after Fox backed out of the joint venture.
On November 29, 2017, it was announced that TV Azteca sold its American counterpart to HC2 Holdings in
New York City
. The transaction closed that same day. Azteca still retained some rights on part of its programming inventory, marketing, advertising sales, assets finance and operations. The transaction also included a seven-year programming and services agreement that allowed HC2 Network to have access, under certain rules, to TV Azteca's library and programming in Mexico, including top entertainment shows, talk shows, reality programs, network and local news, as well as telenovelas and other scripted series. HC2, now known as
INNOVATE Corp.
, also licensed the Azteca America brand and its logo.
[28]
On October 21, 2022,
INNOVATE Corp.
announced that Azteca America would cease operations on December 31, after 22 years of operation as a competitor to leading Spanish networks
Univision
and
Telemundo
. Prior to the announcement, INNOVATE had been selling most of the full-power stations operated by Azteca America, and began notifying affiliates and advertising partners of the network’s planned closure.
[29]
In addition,
TV Azteca
had entered into a content and co-production agreement with competitor
Estrella TV
that will see its news and entertainment programming blended onto that network's schedule.
[30]
The network went off the air on January 1, 2023, at around 12:59 a.m., after an airing of
Ya Cayo Renovado
. Prior to the shutdown, Azteca America's website was redirected to TV Azteca's website on December 26, 2022.
Programming
[
edit
]
Azteca America formerly operated on a 150-hour network programming schedule. It provided various types of general entertainment programming to owned-and-operated and affiliated stations Monday through Fridays from 3:00 a.m. to 12:00 a.m., and Saturdays and Sundays from 5:00 a.m. to 12:00 a.m. Eastern and Pacific Time. All other time periods were filled with
infomercials
. Affiliates were allowed the option to carried local programming ? including local
public affairs
programs, local
brokered programming
and, less commonly, newscasts ? in place of regular programming or infomercials aired within the base Azteca schedule.
The network's programming included coverage of
Liga MX
teams held by the main Azteca network, family game shows, lifestyle, reality and drama series,
telenovelas
and news programming.
[31]
Regular series airing on the network included the "caught-on-tape"-focused newsmagazine
Al Extremo
("To The Extreme"), and the 7pm family hour,
La Hora Ganadora
("The Winning Hour").
[32]
Azteca also aired a five-hour block of Spanish-dubbed American programs aimed at children in a split-schedule format each Saturday and Sunday morning (with the first two hours airing Saturdays and the final three on Sundays), designed to meet the Federal Communications Commission's
educational and informational programming
requirements.
[33]
The U.S.-based Azteca network featured content sourced from TV Azteca's four television networks in Mexico ?
Azteca Uno
,
Azteca 7
,
ADN 40
and
a+
.
[34]
In addition, Azteca complemented its Mexican-originated programming with a lineup of programs from international producers and distributors such as GestMusic Endemol, Colombia's Caracol TV, and Spain's Islas Audiovisual.
[31]
News programming
[
edit
]
Azteca maintained a news division and produced two half-hour newscasts that aired on Monday through Friday evenings, the early evening
Hechos Nacional Tarde
and the late evening
Hechos Nacional Noche,
both anchored by Roberto Ruiz. Both newscasts, produced from Mexico, aired exclusively in the United States and focus on the national and international news and events that affect U.S. Hispanics.
[35]
Azteca also broadcast a three-hour morning news program
Hechos AM
on weekdays
[36]
as well as the weeknight sports highlight and discussion program
Deporte Caliente
("Hot Sports").
[37]
The network formed its news division in 2003, with the debut of the national evening news program
Hechos America
.
[38]
In May 2008, the network relocated production of its national newscasts as well as the local newscasts aired by its Los Angeles flagship station KAZA-TV from the network's Glendale headquarters to Mexico City due to the budget cuts enacted that month, resulting in the layoffs of 19 employees within its news division; the network retained reporters, producers and assignment editors that were based in Los Angeles and correspondents based in New York City, Chicago,
Houston
, Dallas and
Washington, D.C.
[24]
On February 6, 2009, Azteca announced that it would cancel its newscasts
[39]
and announced plans to launch a bi-national newscast produced out of TV Azteca's Mexico City station XHIMT-TV.
[40]
Sports programming
[
edit
]
The network also maintained a sports division,
Azteca Deportes
, which is separate from the division operated by its Mexico-based sister network and was responsible for the production of sports content on Azteca. The division produced
association football
matches from
Liga MX
, which typically aired under the brand "Fut Azteca." In 2013, the network began airing a prime time match-of-the-week involving teams within Liga MX on Friday nights under the brand "Viernes Futbolero" ("Friday Night Futbol").
[41]
In July 2016
Univision
started their own block of Liga MX matches on Saturday nights using the "Futbolero" name called "Sabado Futbolero" ("Saturday Night Futbol").
[42]
Rather than a league media rights deal encompassing all teams, Liga MX allows its member clubs to negotiate its home broadcast contracts individually with a network in both Mexico and the United States, thus why Azteca America held individual team rights.
The network stopped airing Liga MX matches after the Clausura 2017 season after the network sold their home match rights for
Atlas
,
Morelia
,
Tijuana
and
Veracruz
to Univision.
[43]
[44]
In addition, Azteca broadcast a weekly
lucha libre
showcase on Saturday afternoons,
Lucha Azteca
,
[45]
and
Box Azteca
, a weekly prime time
boxing
series that aired on most Saturday nights.
[46]
At the end of the
2018?19
season, Azteca started airing two select
La Liga Segunda Division
matches per weekend as part of an agreement with
beIN Sports
who sub-licensed the rights.
[47]
Stations
[
edit
]
Azteca's network was formerly made up of 64 stations, 27 of which were operated by Azteca America.
[48]
In many areas of the U.S. where the network was not available through broadcast television, Azteca provided a national
cable network
feed that is distributed directly to cable, satellite and
IPTV
providers as an alternative method of distribution in markets without either the availability or the demand for a locally based owned-and-operated or affiliate station.
[49]
Related services
[
edit
]
Azteca HD
[
edit
]
Azteca's master feed was transmitted in
1080i
high definition
. However, only seven of the network's affiliate stations transmitted the network's programming in HD, all but two of which carried the network feed in
720p
high definition; the remainder of its over-the-air stations transmitted Azteca programming in
480i
standard definition
[50]
either due to technical considerations for affiliates of other major networks that carry Azteca programming on a digital subchannel or because a primary feed Azteca affiliate has not yet modified or upgraded their transmission equipment to allow content to be presented in HD.
Azteca America became the third major Spanish-language network in the United States (after Telemundo and Univision) to provide its programming in
high definition
through the network and select local stations with the launch of its simulcast feed, Azteca America HD, on July 16, 2012. All of the network's first-run entertainment, news and sports programming, as well as specials and select acquired programs, were presented in HD since then (with the current exception of archived programs that were made prior to 2012 ? including comedy series such as
Te Cache
("I Got You") and
Ya Cayo Renovado
("It Fell Renovated"), and select children's programs ? and were originally produced in
4:3
standard definition
, as well as most older Mexican-produced feature films). The high-definition feed was available in certain markets via the network's national cable feed, as well as through a few of Azteca's over-the-air affiliates.
See also
[
edit
]
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External links
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