...and his skin is naturally tan.This has nothing to do with broadcasting, but the President just completed a full medical exam… and we found he suffers from signing too many autographs.
...and his skin is naturally tan.This has nothing to do with broadcasting, but the President just completed a full medical exam… and we found he suffers from signing too many autographs.
Here's the Charlotte station's web site.As noted at the top, the description comes from La Raza’s website. That notation was the only thing written by the Atlantic.
None of the definitions include your example of “the clan” and I’m just gonna pray to God that it wasn’t in yours because of this:
larazalaraza.com
I have a bit of an issue with any company, no matter how large (they own a big bunch of smaller market radio stations that are actually pretty decent) that does not understand the nature and terminology of its own market.

But the last time I checked, Charlotte isn't in Mexico.In Mexico it is not called that.
So, will Skydance/CBS air the Trump Center Honors in Dec?
But the music is Mexican and listened to predominantly by Mexican immigrantsBut the last time I checked, Charlotte isn't in Mexico.
Not the same. This is a station marketing today to its audience that is likely 100% Mexican born and who have not idea what "Regional Mexican" means.Are you also going to tell the Pennsylvania Dutch to redo all of their marketing material because "Dutch" is a misnomer and they're actually Deutsch (German), not Dutch?
"You WILL place your ad next to white supremacist content" OKIn addition to interfering in programming, the administration also is interfering with advertising:
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Are the Mexican-born immigrants so thick that they can't figure it out? Where is this "marketing" being done? On billboards? In print? On TV? Or just on the chain's website, as I suspect is the case? How many of the listeners (or potential listeners) you are so concerned about frequent broadcasting companies' websites? And how many of them -- no matter where they saw the marketing you criticize -- would reject a station calling itself La Raza out of hand just because of that one word "regional"?But the music is Mexican and listened to predominantly by Mexican immigrants
Not the same. This is a station marketing today to its audience that is likely 100% Mexican born and who have not idea what "Regional Mexican" means.
That's what I was thinking. Before I knew what the term meant, I just assumed there were different regions of Mexico that had their own styles of music, and somehow the stations played all of them, or some.Are the Mexican-born immigrants so thick that they can't figure it out? Where is this "marketing" being done? On billboards? In print? On TV? Or just on the chain's website, as I suspect is the case? How many of the listeners (or potential listeners) you are so concerned about frequent broadcasting companies' websites? And how many of them -- no matter where they saw the marketing you criticize -- would reject a station calling itself La Raza out of hand just because of that one word "regional"?
And by that reasoning, Country music must've lost half of its audience when they stopped calling it "Country & Western".That's what I was thinking. Before I knew what the term meant, I just assumed there were different regions of Mexico that had their own styles of music, and somehow the stations played all of them, or some.
You are overreacting. I just suggested that using a term that was unfamiliar both in Spanish and English to the core audience is not a good promotional strategy and indicates that their online presence is more motivated by sales than audience promotion.Are the Mexican-born immigrants so thick that they can't figure it out? Where is this "marketing" being done? On billboards? In print? On TV? Or just on the chain's website, as I suspect is the case? How many of the listeners (or potential listeners) you are so concerned about frequent broadcasting companies' websites? And how many of them -- no matter where they saw the marketing you criticize -- would reject a station calling itself La Raza out of hand just because of that one word "regional"?
But you are not Mexican, correct? I was simply stating that the term is unfamiliar or totally unknown to first generation Mexican immigrants, and that the station would be better off using the term they know which is “Grupera”.That's what I was thinking. Before I knew what the term meant, I just assumed there were different regions of Mexico that had their own styles of music, and somehow the stations played all of them, or some.