David said >>>This is more likely a case of the local news in Tijuana not being a very important priority for that station (local news in Latin America, with highly centralized governments, is not prioritized). If you listen to radio in the larger Mexican markets, particularly Mexico City, you will find criticism and analysis of the government and politicians on more stations and with more different points of view than even in the US.<<<
I should have made it clear that I'm talking about maybe 25 years ago, when the PRI controlled everything. XEWT 12 did an hour of news at 6 and an hour at 10pm. But there was no news that might in any way be considered negative in general or critical of authority. Clearly the station did NOT want to rock the boat with the government. For instance, all the San Diego stations were leading with a sewage release from a water treatment plant on the Tijuana River on the Mexican side of the border. Yet XEWT didn't mention it, not even as a wire copy story, let alone sending a camera crew.
I'd imagine from looking at Tijuana newspapers that they were covering the real news. But with XEWT owned by Televisa, Mexico's biggest broadcasting network, and the only Spanish language VHF in the market (XETV 6 broadcasts in English and the other stations were all UHF) they weren't going to tell us anyone was murdered or any business was robbed or the sewage plant is spilling thousands of gallons of raw sewage into the river.
The only negative story I saw was when police had found someone who killed a police officer. The man lay shot and dead on a Tijuana street. The TV cameras got video of his body and face from all angles, something you'd never see on U.S. TV. This was one negative story authorities clearly wanted XEWT to broadcast. Then it was right back to ribbon-cuttings and men in suits holding government meetings.
I'm sure today, with Mexico's competitive elections and the end of one-party democracy, XEWT is freer to broadcast the real news.