Spanish Broadcasting System
Spanish Broadcasting System, Inc. is an American media company specializing in Spanish-speaking audiences. It is one of the largest owners and operators of radio stations in the United States. SBS is also invested in television and internet properties, deriving the majority of its income from advertising through its media products.
SBS owns the internet portal LaMusica.com. It also acquired WSBS-TV in Miami, Florida, and WTCV in San Juan, Puerto Rico, the group of owned and operated TV stations for its Mega TV network.
SBS targets the U.S. Hispanic audience in nine geographic regions: Los Angeles, New York, Chicago, Miami, San Francisco, Puerto Rico, Orlando, Tampa, and Houston.
History
Spanish Broadcasting System was founded by Pablo Raúl Alarcón Sr., who started in Spanish-language radio broadcasting in the early 1950s when he started his first radio station in Camagüey, Cuba, and his son, Raúl Alarcón Jr. Alarcón Sr. had acquired 14 radio stations by the time he fled Cuba with his family to the United States in 1960. In the U.S. he continued his career as an on-air personality at a New York radio station after arriving in the United States before being promoted to programming director. He subsequently owned a recording studio and advertising agency before borrowing $3.5 million USD to purchase the first SBS radio station, WSKQ-AM in 1983 with his son, Raúl Alarcón Jr. Alarcón Sr. would serve as SBS Chairman of the board of directors, while his son would serve as an account executive in the sales department.SBS generated sales of about $20 million in its first year, confirming the influence of the growing Spanish-speaking audience. Raúl Alarcón Jr. became President of SBS and a director in October 1985. In 1988 SBS purchased its first FM station, regional Mexican KLAX 97.9 FM in Los Angeles. The company went public in the fall of 1991, raising $435.8 million by selling 21.8 million shares at $20 per share. SBS bought its third station, New York's WSKQ-FM, in 1989. In 1993 Alfredo Alonso was hired and reformatted it as Mega 97.9, La Mega, surpassing the market's longtime leader, the light rock station WLTW-FM, by 1998. A major turning point for Spanish radio occurred that year when media researchers at Arbitron rated La Mega's morning show number one over that of the radio personality Howard Stern.
File:6.2.11RaulAlarconByLuigiNovi6.jpg|thumb|upright|In 2011 Union City, New Jersey honored Pablo Raúl Alarcón with a star on the Walk of Fame at Celia Cruz Plaza.
In 2002 the company created SBS Entertainment, a concert production arm. It also diversified by purchasing 80 percent of JuJu Media, the operator of the Spanish-English Web site LaMusica.com, which offered Latin music, entertainment, news, and culture. Later that year, at the insistence of Alarcón Jr., SBS launched KZAB-FM, targeting the Central American population in Los Angeles. In 2003, WSKQ was the most listened-to Spanish-language radio station in the United States. That year Alarcón Jr. told Billboard magazine, "My opinion is that radio programming continues to be an art. It is not a science. I will not argue with the fact that research gives you a good indication, a good road map."
Raúl Alarcón Jr. is the current chief executive officer of SBS, a position he has held since June 1994. He also succeeded his father as chairman of the board of directors on November 2, 1999. Alarcón Sr. would continue to serve as chairman emeritus. Alarcón Jr. is responsible for the company's long-range strategic planning and operational matters, and according to SBS's website, is instrumental in the acquisition and related financing of each SBS station.
In 2004, Viacom , Viacom's response to Univision-HBC merger, SBS was combined with Viacom's Infinity Broadcasting.
In 2009, Raúl Alarcón Sr. was posthumously inducted into Billboard's Latin Music Hall of Fame. On June 3, 2011, the heavily Cuban-American community of Union City, New Jersey honored Alarcón Sr. with a star on the Walk of Fame at Celia Cruz Plaza. Raúl Alarcón Jr. was present to accept the honors for his father.
SBS said it would sell Mega TV in 2023 to Voz Media, a conservative Spanish-language news media firm based in Texas, pending approval by the Federal Communications Commission. On September 22, SBS terminated the deal after the buyer breached its agreement to close the deal by the Sept. 15 deadline the two companies agreed to.
Radio
SBS radio stations use one of six programming formats:- Spanish tropical: salsa music, merengue, bachata, reggaetón dance music
- Regional Mexican: ranchera, norteña, banda, cumbia music typically originating from regions of Mexico
- Spanish adult contemporary: soft romantic ballads, Spanish pop music
- Spanish oldies: Latin/English music classics from the 1960s, 1970s, and 1980s
- American top 40: current pop music hits
- Hurban: reggaetón dance music
Los Angeles, California
- KLAX-FM 97.9 La Raza HD1 / La Privada 97.9 HD2
- KXOL-FM Mega 96.3 HD1 / Mega 96.3 HD2
San Francisco, California
- KRZZ 93.3 La Raza / La Privada 93.3 HD2
Houston, Texas
- KROI La Ley 92.1 / La Privada 92.1 HD2
Chicago, Illinois
- WLEY-FM La Ley 107.9 / La Privada 107.9 HD2 / Mega 107.9 HD3
New York, New York
- WSKQ-FM Mega 97.9 HD1
- WPAT-FM 93.1 Amor HD1 / La Privada 93.1 HD2
Puerto Rico
- WMEG La Mega 106.9 HD1 / La Megaestación 106.9 HD2
- WEGM La Mega 95.1
- WRXD Estereotempo 96.5
- WZNA Estereotempo 1040
- WZNT Zeta 93.7 HD1 / La Privada 93.7 HD2
- WZMT Zeta 93.3
- WIOB Zeta 97.5 HD1 / Estereotempo 97.5 HD2 / Viva 97.5 HD3
- WODA La Nueva 94.7 HD1
- WNOD La Nueva 94.1
Miami, Florida
- WXDJ El Zol 106.7 HD1
- WCMQ-FM Zeta 92.3 HD1
- WRMA Ritmo 95.7 HD1 / La Privada 95.7 HD2
- WRAZ Caracol Radio America 106.3
- WMFM El Zol 107.9
Orlando, Florida
- WPYO El Nuevo Zol 95.3 / La Privada 95.3 HD2 / Salsa 95.3 HD3
Tampa, Florida
- WSUN El Nuevo Zol 97.1 / La Privada 97.1 HD2
Affiliated Stations In Mexico
- XHSNP-FM La Caliente 97.7 - San Luis Potosí, San Luis Potosí
- XHKB-FM La Lupe 99.9 - Guadalajara, Jalisco
- XHITS-FM Hits 106.1 - Monterrey, Nuevo León