Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

Media in Albuquerque, New Mexico

Overview of mass media in Albuquerque, New Mexico, United States From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Media in Albuquerque, New Mexico
Remove ads
Remove ads

Albuquerque is the primary media hub of the US state of New Mexico, which includes Santa Fe and Las Cruces.[1][2] The vistas and adobe architecture of New Mexico are a major backdrop of Western fiction and the Western genre.[3][4]

Thumb
Albuquerque Studios, a production hub owned by Netflix

Some media conglomerates which operate in the city include Netflix (via its Albuquerque Studios),[5] NBCUniversal,[6] The Walt Disney Company,[7] and Warner Bros. Discovery.[8][9]

The Albuquerque Journal is to the largest daily newspaper by circulation in the state. Magazines and news publications in the city include Albuquerque the Magazine,[10] Albuquerque Business First,[11] the University of New Mexico's Daily Lobo,[12] Outside, and New Mexico Magazine.[13]

Broadcast networks in the city include ABC (KOAT-TV), CBS/Fox (KRQE), NBC (KOB), Telemundo (KASA-TV), Trinity Broadcasting Network (KNAT-TV), and Univision (KLUZ-TV). Public Broadcasting has a NM PBS presence through sister stations KNME-TV and KNMD-TV. The public radio station KANW plays some NPR programmingas well as New Mexico music.[14]

The following is a list of media operations within the greater Albuquerque metropolitan area, and some media in broader Albuquerque–Santa Fe–Las Vegas and neighboring El Paso–Las Cruces, Texas–New Mexico combined statistical area, which also target Albuquerque.

Remove ads

Studios

Remove ads

Publications

Newspapers

Magazines

Remove ads

Television

Summarize
Perspective

Full-powered stations

More information Callsign, Display Ch. ...

ATSC 3.0

More information Callsign, Display Ch. ...

Religious stations

More information Callsign, Display Ch. ...

Low-powered stations

More information Callsign, Display Ch. ...
Remove ads

Broadcast radio

Summarize
Perspective

A number of radio stations are broadcast from and/or are licensed to Albuquerque, including the following:[28][29]

AM stations

FM stations

Asterisk (*) indicates a non-commercial (public radio/campus/educational) broadcast.

Translators

  • 92.9 K225CH Rio Rancho (Oldies, KDSK)
  • 93.7 K229CL Albuquerque (80s Hits, KRKE)
  • 94.5 K233CG Sandia (Active rock, KTBL)
  • 95.9 K240BL Albuquerque (Sports talk, KNML)
  • 96.9 K245CD Albuquerque (Conservative talk, KDAZ)
  • 98.1 K251AU Albuquerque (Classic country, KBQI HD2)
  • 98.9 K255AU Corrales (Catholic radio, KQNM)
  • 100.9 K265CA Albuquerque (Urban Contemporary, KZRR HD2)
  • 102.1 K271CP Albuquerque (Classic hits, KNMM)
  • 102.9 K275AO Albuquerque (Hispanic rhythmic, KABG HD2)
  • 103.7 K279BP Albuquerque (Smooth jazz, KOAZ)
  • 104.3 K282CD Los Lunas (LifeTalk Radio, KSVA)
  • 107.5 K298BY Albuquerque (News and talk, KANW HD2)*
Remove ads

Defunct publications

  • Albuquerque Tribune: (1922-2008) An afternoon general newspaper, and former competitor to the Albuquerque Journal.[30]
  • Bosque Beast: (2012-2016) Covered animals and pet owners; published six times a year; free to every residence and business in Corrales; delivered free to pickup locations around Albuquerque and Sandoval County.[31]
  • Local iQ: (2006-2014) Albuquerque lifestyle magazine; contains hyper-local information including arts and entertainment, food, wine, music, film, books, theater, travel, comedy, retail and art, among many other topics; printed bi-weekly; free on the stands.[32]
  • Weekly Alibi: (1992-2020) an alternative weekly newspaper published in Albuquerque, featuring news, film, music, art, food, entertainment, blogs, personals and event calendars.[33]
Remove ads

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads