Azteca Trece
| Type | Terrestrial television network |
|---|---|
| Country | Mexico |
| Slogan | Vive la tele (Live the TV) |
| Owner | TV Azteca |
| Launch date | 1991 |
| Official website | Azteca 13 |
Azteca Trece (or Azteca 13) is a Mexican television broadcast network owned by TV Azteca, with affiliate stations all over Mexico all of which are owned and operated by TV Azteca. Azteca Trece uses Mexico, Distrito Federal's XHDF as its flagship station and its channel as part of its name. Azteca Trece's programming is available in HD and is available where affiliates are broadcasting in digital television.[1][2] Azteca Trece programming is available in Mexico through SKY México and some Azteca Trece programming can be seen in Azteca America and Azteca Mexico on channel 442 on DirecTV in the United States.
Azteca Trece Internacional
The network also operates an international version of Azteca Trece as Azteca Trece Internacional, reaching 13 countries in Central and South America. On July 15, 2004, the CRTC in Canada denied a request for Azteca Trece Internacional to be broadcasted via digital cable and satellite. However, a second subsequent request was approved on January 20, 2006. The channel is available in Canada on Rogers Digital Cable, Vidéotron & Bell Fibe TV.
Programming
Daytime programming consists of original news, talk, and general programming. Most of Azteca 13's primetime programming consists of telenovelas.
Winter 2011 primetime programming consists of:[3]
Monday through Friday
- Venga la Alegría
- Acorralada (telenovela)
- Ventaneando (tabloid television)
- Cosas de la Vida (talk show)
- Lo que callamos las mujeres (telenovela)
- Corazon apasionado (telenovela)
- Amor Cautivo (telenovela)
- Los Rey (telenovela)
- Hechos (news broadcasting)
Saturday
- Password (game show)
Sunday
- Extranormal (paranormal show)
- Aprieta y Gana (game show)
- Romero (sports talk)
- La Academia 10
Azteca Trece affiliates
The following is a list of all full-time Azteca 13 affiliates:[4][5]
References
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| This article about Mexican television is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
