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XHGJG-TDT

XHGJG-TV
Guadalajara, Jalisco, México
Branding C7 Jalisco
C7 Noticias (newscasts)
Slogan La Industria Creativa de los Jaliscienses
Channels Digital: 25 (UHF)
Virtual: 17
Translators see below
Owner Sistema Jalisciense de Radio y Televisión
(Gobierno del Estado de Jalisco)
Founded January 16, 1991
Sister station(s) XEJB-AM, XEJB-FM
Former channel number(s) 7 (analog, 1991-2015)
25 (digital virtual, 2014-16)
Transmitter power 135.55 kW
Transmitter coordinates 20°35′57″N 103°21′56″W / 20.59917°N 103.36556°W / 20.59917; -103.36556
Website c7jalisco.com/newsite/

XHGJG-TDT channel 7, also known as C7, is a public television station serving Guadalajara, Jalisco, México. Operated by the Sistema Jalisciense de Radio y Televisión, it is owned by the State of Jalisco. Its programming is primarily cultural and educational content and its signal reaches much of western México as well as being seen outside México via DirecTV.

The first governor of the state of Jalisco to consider the possibility of opening a state-owned television station was Juan Gil Preciado in 1960. However, plans did not start to actually build one until 30 years later, when the state government began working to sign one on.

On January 16, 1991, XHGJG-TV took to the air under the Department of Cultural Broadcasters, taking the institutional name Sistema Jalisciense de Radio, Televisión y Cinematografía (Jalisco System of Radio, Television and Film). The original transmitter and facilities were housed on the 10th floor of the Education Tower along with a 6,000-watt transmitter. That night it broadcast its first news program, the newscast Actualidad Informativa, which had as its first top story the beginning of Operation Desert Storm. Not long after, it was moved from the state Secretariat of Education and Culture to the Secretariat of Culture upon its separation, taking the name Sistema Jalisciense de Radio y Televisión and losing the film component. At this time the station only broadcast several hours of programming per day in the evening, slowly expanding to additional timeslots.

An earthquake in June 1994 in Guadalajara forced the state's Guadalajara radio stations, XEJB-AM and XEJB-FM, to move to the Casa de la Cultura Jalisciense. On October 11, 1995, XHGJG joined them, as another earthquake two days prior caused serious damage to the Education Tower and the station had to relocate. In the late 1990s, the transmitters of all three stations were moved to Cerro del Cuatro, home of other Guadalajara radio and TV station transmitters, further increasing the stations' coverage.

In September 1999, the state government received a permit to sign on the first rebroadcaster of XHGJG, low-powered XHGZG-TV channel 12 in Ciudad Guzmán with transmitter on Cerro de la Escalera. This began a period of growth for the station, which later moved to the Edificio México in Guadalajara and signed on a transmitter on channel 13 in Puerto Vallarta.


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