XEPE-AM
City | Tecate, Baja California |
---|---|
Broadcast area | San Diego-Tijuana |
Branding | ESPN 1700 |
Frequency | 1700 kHz |
First air date | March 28, 2005 |
Format | Sports |
Power | 10,000 watts[1] |
Class | B |
Transmitter coordinates | 32°32′16″N 116°59′23″W / 32.53778°N 116.98972°W |
Callsign meaning | X-"E S P N" (E) |
Former callsigns | XEKTT-AM (1994-2005) |
Affiliations | ESPN Radio |
Owner |
Media Sports de México, S.A. de C.V. (programmed by Local Media of San Diego) |
Sister stations | XEPRS-AM, XHPRS-FM |
XEPE-AM at 1700 kHz is an English-language sports radio station calling itself ESPN 1700. XEPE is licensed to Tecate, Baja California, Mexico. Like other Baja California stations broadcasting in English near the Mexico-United States border, it focuses on listeners in the San Diego, California area. The station carries programming from ESPN Radio most of the day, with some midday and afternoon hours airing paid financial shows that had originally been carried during the previous business radio format.
XEPE is on the air 24 hours a day at 10,000 watts in the AM expanded band, commonly known as the X band. The 1700 kHz frequency has de facto clear channel status; there are no expanded AM band stations at 1700 in the United States west of Texas, and the only other radio station on 1700 kHz in Mexico is XEFCSM-AM in Mérida, in southeastern Mexico. And unlike US X-band stations in the U.S., which reduce their power to 1,000 watts at night, XEPE keeps its 10,000 watts of power around the clock.
XEPE's programming and sales rights in the U.S. are owned by Local Media of San Diego, a division of the Broadcast Company of the Americas. The same firm operates XEPRS-AM, a sports station affiliated with CBS Sports Radio and known as The Mighty 1090, and Classic Hits station XHPRS-FM known as 105.7 Max-FM. The studios and offices are located in the neighborhood of Sorrento Valley, San Diego.
History
The concession history of XEPE begins in August 1987, when Guillermo Dionisio Salas Vargas was selected from among 19 applicants to operate a station on 1600 kHz, with callsign XETCT-AM. By the time a concession was issued in 1994, the station had the callsign XEKTT-AM. In 1999, XEKTT was sold to Carlos de Jesús Quiñones Armendáriz (Radio S.A.), who in turn sold the station to Media Sports de México, S.A. de C.V. In the late 1990s and early 2000s, both the frequency and callsign changed: in 2004, the Mexican government authorized the station to move to 1700 kHz, and in February 2005, the callsign was changed to XEPE-AM.
XEPE originally signed on mid-August 2005 with a business talk format under the branding Cash 1700. On August 1, 2007, XEPE switched to a talk radio format, while keeping some business talk programs, such as financial talk show host Ray Lucia. Conservative syndicated talk shows from Michael Reagan and Dennis Miller were on the schedule. After progressive talk station 1360 KLSD switched to a sports format, XEPE tried adding some liberal-leaning shows including one locally hosted by Stacy Taylor. The syndicated The Lionel Show was carried during overnight hours.
In late 2009, XEPE became a partner to sister station XEPRS 1090. XEPRS was enjoying success as San Diego's top Sports radio station and XEPE began running some of the games and sports shows that XEPRS couldn't carry due to other commitments. On September 27, 2010 XEPE announced that it had fully made the transition to sports talk, although some midday and afternoon hours, it continues to carry paid business programs. The Ray Lucia financial show also airs every weekday. The station was branded as ESPN 1700 with programming from the ESPN Radio network, effective October 6, 2010.
Sports rights
Currently, play-by-play on ESPN 1700 consists of the University of San Diego football and basketball games and San Diego Gulls hockey games (on a secondary basis, shared with XEPRS).
At one time, it aired San Diego State Aztecs basketball (now on KOGO or KLSD), the Los Angeles Galaxy of Major League Soccer (now on KLAC and KEIB in Los Angeles), and San Diego Sockers PASL games. It was also the flagship station of the San Diego Shockwave of the National Indoor Football League until the league suspended operations. It also had broadcast rights to the Lake Elsinore Storm minor league baseball team until 2009, when it lost the rights to KXFG.
External links
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- ↑ Instituto Federal de Telecomunicaciones. Infraestructura de Estaciones de Radio AM. Last modified 2016-03-31. Retrieved 2015-06-16.