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Border Media making noise

From: The Austin Business Journal

Tom Castro is a visionary. Castro, president of Houston-based Border Media Partners LLC, co-founded the broadcasting company three years ago in McAllen. He since has built a mammoth Texas network of radio stations.

Border Media Partners entered the Austin market last year with the purchase of radio stations KHHL-FM 98.9, KXXS-FM 104.9 and KOKE-AM 1600, along with radio stations in Waco, Dallas and Laredo, from Irving-based Amigo Broadcasting LP. The deal was valued at $70 million.

Now with seven frequencies in Austin, most of them targeted at the Hispanic market, Border Media Partners is capitalizing on Texas' growing Hispanic and Latino demographic.

Growing right along with that demographic is Castro's company, which has swelled from 12 Austin employees last October to the current 81.

"We've run out of space in this building," Pedro Gasc, Border Media Partners' vice president and Austin market manager, says of the company's current 4,500-square-foot space at 2211 S. I-35. "We need to hire more people, but we just don't have the room for them here."

Border Media Partners will have room for growth in its new 18,779-square-foot home at 912 S. Capital of Texas Highway. Move-in is scheduled for November.

Richard Paddock, office specialist with Hill Partners Inc., represented Border's new landlord, Boston-based REIT Management.

Border Media Partners' Austin offices and studios will take up the entire fourth floor of the Vista Ridge building, more than quadrupling its current space.

With that added space, Gasc says, the company likely will end this year with another 20 employees. He says another 40 could come aboard in 2006.

Construction has started at the new office, with BMP sinking about $2 million into remodeling, studio soundproofing and equipment to improve radio signals.

That's a small investment compared with the $250 million that Border Media Partners has raised over the past three years. Investors include New York-based Goldman Sachs Urban Investment Group; Washington, D.C.-based Darby-BBVA Latin America Private Equity Fund LP; the family of Laredo banker Tony Sanchez, a Democrat who unsuccessfully ran for Texas governor in 2002; and, most recently, New York-based Vestar Capital Partners.

"For us, Austin is a top priority, along with San Antonio," Castro says.

"We've probably created 50 jobs in Austin in the last nine months, and spent a lot of money on research and developing formats. Now, we are focusing on business-to-business marketing to educate other Austin businesses about the buying power of the Latino market."

With 11 percent of Austin's radio dollars targeting Hispanic listeners -- the Capital City is ranked 42nd among national Hispanic radio markets, according to research company Arbitron Inc. -- Border Media Partners is riding a swelling radio wave.

Mark Vanderslice, a senior associate with Hill Partners Corporate Services in Austin who represented Border Media Partners in the Vista Ridge deal, says the broadcasting company's Austin expansion won't end with the office improvements.

"This is going to be an extreme upgrade for Border Media," Vanderslice says. "But they might also eventually do some kind of small retail outlets, one up north and one south, but that's still in the preliminary stages."

Other plans for Border Media Partners include live broadcasts for the company's local Air America affiliate, and the possibility of buying more radio stations -- in Texas and elsewhere.

"If the opportunity came up, we'd be interested in buying more stations," Castro says.

"We currently have about 35 in Texas, but we're looking at other states between Texas and the West Coast as well. Colorado, New Mexico, Arizona, California -- those are all areas we'd like to move into."
 
> From: The Austin Business Journal
>
> Tom Castro is a visionary. Castro, president of
> Houston-based Border Media Partners LLC, co-founded the
> broadcasting company three years ago in McAllen. He since
> has built a mammoth Texas network of radio stations.
>
> Border Media Partners entered the Austin market last year
> with the purchase of radio stations KHHL-FM 98.9, KXXS-FM
> 104.9 and KOKE-AM 1600, along with radio stations in Waco,
> Dallas and Laredo, from Irving-based Amigo Broadcasting LP.
> The deal was valued at $70 million.
>
> Now with seven frequencies in Austin, most of them targeted
> at the Hispanic market, Border Media Partners is
> capitalizing on Texas' growing Hispanic and Latino
> demographic.

With due respect to Mr. Castro, there is nothing special about BMP. Border is a marginal spanish-speaking outfit with an occasional liberal talker thrown in if they have no more formats to run.

I fail to see much vision here. Tom's company had a massive cash infusion and overpaid for a bunch of rim-shot FM signals and weak suburban AM sticks. (aside from the original stations in the valley)

I have listened to a handful of BMP stations and i don't think the programming is anything to earth shattering either.

This is a fluff piece for a fluff third-rate radio company.

HR
 
Re: Border Media copies Preciosa in Valley

>
> I have listened to a handful of BMP stations and i don't
> think the programming is anything to earth shattering
> either.

They flipped one of the LRGV signals to a library based format like UVN's Recuerdo or CCU's Preciosa... early this morning.
 
Re: Border Media copies Preciosa in Valley

> >
> > I have listened to a handful of BMP stations and i don't
> > think the programming is anything to earth shattering
> > either.
>
> They flipped one of the LRGV signals to a library based
> format like UVN's Recuerdo or CCU's Preciosa... early this
> morning.
>

I agree...nothing special about these guys. Do they have a full Valley Wide signal?
 
Re: Border Media copies Preciosa in Valley

> > >
> > > I have listened to a handful of BMP stations and i don't
>
> > > think the programming is anything to earth shattering
> > > either.
> >
> > They flipped one of the LRGV signals to a library based
> > format like UVN's Recuerdo or CCU's Preciosa... early this
>
> > morning.
> >
>
> I agree...nothing special about these guys. Do they have a
> full Valley Wide signal?
>

They have a couple of simulcast that cover most of the valley with multiple class a's. They also control a couple of Mexican border stations I don't know much about these Mexican properties, specifically XAVO, but i think it might cover the entire valley. Maybe someone else who knows the valley well can chime in.

HR
 
Re: Border Media copies Preciosa in Valley

The only valley-wide signal would be KBUC-102.1, which, at 18,000 watts on a stick located 10 miles N of Raymondville would be a real stretch to consider "Valley-wide". They simulcast their "Jammin" format on 104.9(McAllen) and 95.3(Port Isabel). Their "Digital" format is simulcast on 101.5(Reynosa) and 92.7 (South Padre Island). They recently acquired KBMI 97.7, licensed to Roma. On the AM side, they have N-T KURV-710, country KVJY-840, and ESPN-1240(KSOX).
 
> This is a fluff piece for a fluff third-rate radio company.
>

Don't know too many third-rate companies that have launched #1 25-54 entries into top 50 markets like BMP has done with Jammin' in San Antonio. I guess I need to get out more.
 
> > This is a fluff piece for a fluff third-rate radio
> company.
> >
>
> Don't know too many third-rate companies that have launched
> #1 25-54 entries into top 50 markets like BMP has done with
> Jammin' in San Antonio. I guess I need to get out more.
>

Do you work Castro? You completely missed my point on purpose. The article in question was a fluff piece about the Austin cluster and their move into a new office in the coming months. It had nothing to do with San Antonio.

I am not saying that everything BMP is or has done is awful. Even the worst companies have a few bright spots. Take a look at Cumulus, out of their 310 stations there are a couple of good ones. You are coming up with conclusions that are not there.

BMP did do some good things with 94.1. Picking up the well respected and known call letters KTFM was a great idea. But that does not mean that the group as a whole is anything special.

Since you brought San Antonio up, let's talk about it. KTFM has a decent signal for a C2. But up in the northern suburbs it is not great. As for the rest of their cluster sans KSAH, not impressive. KLEY and KRIO's signals are a joke!

I just don't think you are being very reasonable. One successful station still in the honeymoon period does not make a great broadcasting company.

HR
 
> > This is a fluff piece for a fluff third-rate radio
> company.
> >
>
> Don't know too many third-rate companies that have launched
> #1 25-54 entries into top 50 markets like BMP has done with
> Jammin' in San Antonio. I guess I need to get out more.

That was short in duration. The station is now down to 3rd 25-54. In August, extrapolated, KROM is the 25-54 leader.
>
 
Re: Border Media copies Preciosa in Valley

>
> They flipped one of the LRGV signals to a library based
> format like UVN's Recuerdo or CCU's Preciosa... early this
> morning.

Which station flipped? One of the old-timers or someone new?
 
Re: Border Media copies Preciosa in Valley

> >
> > They flipped one of the LRGV signals to a library based
> > format like UVN's Recuerdo or CCU's Preciosa... early this
>
> > morning.
>
> Which station flipped? One of the old-timers or someone
> new?

102.5, the Reynosa XHRR which they run via an LMA. Formerly, this was Digital.

So much for pop /rock in Spanish, the dead format of the last decade.
 
Border Media copies Preciosa in Austin

> They flipped one of the LRGV signals to a library based
> format like UVN's Recuerdo or CCU's Preciosa... early this
> morning.

They also flipped KKLB in Austin to a similiar aforementioned
format last wednesday or thursday..can't remember when.
They are also simulcasting the format on KTXZ-AM, spelling the
end of Tejano in Austin, Texas.
 
Re: Border Media copies Preciosa in Valley

> 102.5, the Reynosa XHRR which they run via an LMA. Formerly,
> this was Digital.
>
> So much for pop /rock in Spanish, the dead format of the
> last decade.
>

XHRR was Digital only for three or four months. Before that it was Exa FM. Digital is still on XHAVO 101.5 and KESO 92.7.
 
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