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Hispanic Radio Market Hurban Spanish Language
By P. Solomon Banda, AP - As he waited for the bus on a searingly hot day in Denver, Chaz Aguinaldo leaned back and listened to the syncopated beat and Spanish lyrics coming through his headphones.
No Beck for Aguinaldo. No Black Eyed Peas. He was tuned in to KMGG-FM and a new format the radio chain giant Clear Channel Communications Inc. calls Hurban, for Hispanic urban. The playlist includes everyone from crossover stars like Shakira to Daddy Yankee, the Puerto Rican artist who mixes hip-hop and Latin beats in a musical fusion called reggaeton.
The DJs, like the songs, mix English and Spanish freely, sometimes in midsentence. Clear Channel's slogan for its new Hurban stations is "Latino and Proud," something that resonates with Aguinaldo.
"It's in both English and Spanish, the way it should be," he said.
English is still the language of choice for most of the nation's nearly 14,000 radio stations, but a booming Hispanic population is pushing dramatic change: Spanish-language radio is at an all-time high, with more than 678 stations across the country, according to Arbitron Inc.
"That number could double in two years," said Mike Henry, a Denver-based radio consultant.
In 2000, the U.S. census counted 35.6 million Hispanics, and that number has grown to 41.3 million. Estimates of Hispanic purchasing power now top $630 billion, up nearly threefold from $233 billion in 1990, and it's expected to reach $926 billion in 2007, according to Denver marketing firm Heinrich Hispanidad.
Spanish-language radio is no longer about mom-and-pop stations that operated for years on the fringes of the AM dial.
While Hispanics account for nearly 14 percent of the U.S. population, expenditures by companies trying to reach this market account for only 3.2 percent of total advertising dollars, according to the Association of Hispanic Advertising Agencies.
San Antonio-based Clear Channel recently converted English-language radio stations to the Hurban format in Denver, Albuquerque, Houston and Miami.
Denver's KBNO-AM - Que Bueno (Spanish for "how good") to its listeners - had been No. 1 from October through July in the 18-to-34 category during the morning drive.
"Our strength is our localization - community service and community involvement," said station Vice President Mike Ferrufino.
"I think people are only now becoming more familiar with the power of the Hispanic market, whether politically or economically," he said. "Competition will only help us get better."
Ahorre August 9, 2005 05:46 PM