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LATV ( Spanish pronunciation: Ã, [laÃ,Â'te? e] ; originally pronounced broadcast from 2007 to 2014 and, since 2014, serves as a backronym for the on-air slogan, "Latino Alternative Television") is an American bilingual broadcast television network owned by LATV Networks, LLC. This network primarily carries a mixture of original and imported music, a series of talk and variety devoted to Hispanic and Latino Latin American teenagers and young adults between the ages of 13 and 35. From the beginning, LATV has characterized itself to feature Latin Alternative musicians such as La Ley, Zayra Alvarez, Jaguares, Julieta Venegas, Enrique Bunbury, Ely Guerra, and Aterciopelados on his show.

These networks are available in many markets through digital sub-channels of broadcast television stations and to certain cable providers throughout the United States and Puerto Rico through local affiliate networks (through basic programming levels for mainstream affiliates, and digital levels for sub-channels -a affiliate ).


Video LATV



Histori

LATV originated in 2001 as a programming format on KJLA (channel 57), an independent television station licensed to the outskirts of Los Angeles Ventura, California (signed in 1990 as KSTV-TV, an affiliate of GalavisiÃÆ'³n), primarily Spanish programming as well limited amount of English content. The format is the development of the station's night and weekend programs, adopted in July 1998, after the dissatisfaction of The WB (to protect existing KTL affiliates, after the KJLA gained a must-take status to cable providers in the Los Angeles area); the remainder of the current schedule consists of a financial news program and an overnight programming from Shop at Home Network. As the first bilingual television station in Los Angeles, LATV focuses on music in its flagship show, LATV Live and Mex 2 the Max. In 2003, the local network expanded its program into a 24-hour schedule.

On 22 November 2006, Costa de Oro Television (founder of KJLA, purchased by network co-founder Walter Ulloa in 1994) announced that it would convert the LATV format into a complete national network with a standard schedule, resulting in a network of competitors to the language network Established Spanish like Univision, Telemundo and Azteca AmÃÆ'Â © rica; as a result, Costa de Oro Television was later renamed LATV Networks. The national LATV network was launched on April 23, 2007, at 16 stations in the media market with a large Latino/Hispanic population. On May 22, 2007, LATV entered into an affiliation agreement with Entravision Communications to bring the network to stations owned or managed in 10 markets (including Boston, Denver, Albuquerque, Tampa-St. Petersburg and Washington, DC), including five of the 25 Hispanic markets largest in the US

On August 20, 2007, Post-Newsweek Station (now Graham Media Group) acquired a minority in LATV Networks' parent network; as part of the acquisition, Post-Newsweek also signed an affiliation agreement to bring LATV on its digital television channel sub-channels in Houston, Miami, Orlando, and San Antonio (company stations in Jacksonville and Detroit were later added to the agreement); Post-Newsweek relinquished its interest in the network in 2013 to take on a network of common English sub-channels, instead, with LATV moving its affiliates in most markets where companies have stations to other power and low-power outlets.

Maps LATV



Programming


LATV provides public entertainment programs to stations affiliated on weekdays from 9 am to 3 am and weekends starting at 1:00 pm. until 3:00 am Eastern Time, with paid programs and other mediated filling most other time slots. This network broadcasts a mix of originally produced programs and series produced by Mexico-based broadcast networks MVS Television and Multimedios Television (with which LATV maintains a programming agreement), which is mostly broadcasted in Spanish.

Programs served on the network include RokamolÃÆ' Â © (a rock music video series with various Latin rock artists serving as a host), La Casa TV (lifestyle series as long as one hour), Locas por el futbol (series of weekly soccer discussions and discussions organized by a panel of six women), Almohadazo el Noti (news/midnight non-formal talk show , hosted by Fernanda Tapia), En La Zone (entertainment/talk show), Ponle Play (the daily music video series hosted by Caroline Lau), Las SupÃÆ' Â © r 20 (composed of two series of weekend music countdowns each featuring pop and Regional Mexico videos), Las Noches del LATV (renamed version of the final Multimedios TV series variety night Las Noches del FÃÆ'ºtbol ) and Conexeo Mundial de Lucha Libre (series of weekend lucha libre wrestling and sports program tung gal network).

Although the majority of LATV programming is produced in Spanish, the network also carries a limited number of program content produced exclusively in English or in both languages ​​including Latino TV, a series of interviews focused on Latinos in entertainment, sports and art (similar in format to American Latino TV and LatiNation ); and a children program originally distributed for broadcast syndication by Telco Productions, a production company founded by host/television producer Alex Paen - which airs for half an hour on Sunday to Friday morning and is intended to meet three hours of weekly educational content requirements as determined by the Federal Communications Commission's Children's Television Act. Since 2014, the network also simulates home shopping programs from the LC Shop every night from 3:00 am to 9:00 am Eastern and Pacific Time, through a time brokerage agreement.

Networks do not carry national morning and evening newscasts, nor do they carry daytime programs for the first day of the week; the network even brings the essence of the daytime behind the night and late night programs as part of the daytime lineup on Mondays to Fridays. The only network news program is Nacional Perspectives , a Sunday night political talk show produced by Entravision Communications (LATV previously produced a weekly national news broadcast called Noticias LATV , which aired from 2010 to July 2012).

Current programming

Talk/interview/lifestyle show

  • Get This Girl (2016-present)
  • Zoo (2016-present)
  • Cocinemos Juntos (2009-present)
  • ELZ (2009-present)
  • El Ultimo Pitazo (2014-present)

Music series

  • LATV en Concierto (2007-present)
  • RokamolÃÆ' Â © (2012-present)
  • Las SupÃÆ'Â © r 20: (2012-present)
  • Videos2Go (2015-present)
  • Edge (2016-current)

Archived series

  • Roomies (2014-present)

News programming

  • Lo Que no Sabias (2014-present)
  • Nacional Perspectives (2013-present)

Sports programming

  • Consejo Mundial de Lucha Libre (2007-present)
  • Fan Nation (2016-present)
  • World Class Boxing (2016-current)

Children programming

  • Animal Rescue (2013-present)
  • Biz Kid $ (2013-current)
  • Dragonfly TV (2013-present)
  • Dog Tales (2016-present)
  • Think Big (2013-present)
  • American Heart (2016-present)

Previous program

Talk/interview

  • American Latino TV (2007-2013)

Archived series

  • Ceasar and Chuy (2007-2008)

News programming

  • Esto es Insolito (2010-2014)
  • Noticias LATV (2010-2012)

Chencha - LIVE on LATV | En Concierto - YouTube
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Affiliate

In January 2015, LATV programming was conducted on television stations in 37 media markets covering 17 states, the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico, covering about 37% of the United States (or 42,254,000 households with at least one television set). Most radio stations accept LATV through affiliate agreements with the network; The main station of Los Angeles KJLA serves as a station owned and operated by the network through its ownership by LATV parent LATV Networks.

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See also

  • MTV Tres - US version of MTV. Latino.
  • The NBC Universo - a digital cable and satellite network intended for Latino viewers aged 18-49 years, formerly known as mun2.
  • Nuvo TV - a dead network intended for adults between 18 and 49 years old with a focus on the dominant Latin language of English.
  • UniMÃÆ'¡s - a competing network owned by Univision Communications that also specializes in programming aimed at the age of 18-34 demographic.

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References


Gender Roles and Polite Behaviors | The Zoo - YouTube
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External links

  • Official website

Source of the article : Wikipedia

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