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N+ Univision

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
News division of Univision
For the television news bulletins produced by this department, seeNoticiero N+ Univision.

N+ Univision
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News division of:Univision
N+
Key people:Leopoldo Gomez
(President, N+ Univision[1])
Founded:1987
Headquarters:Univision NewsPort
Univision Communications South Florida Headquarters, 8551 NW 30th Terrace,Doral,Florida, U.S.
Major bureaus:International Headquarters,
8551 NW 30th Terrace, Doral, Florida
Mexico Headquarters,Mexico City,Mexico
Puerto Rico Headquarters
San Juan,Puerto Rico
Area served:United States
Latin America
Broadcast programs:Al Punto
Aquí y Ahora
¡Despierta América!
Noticiero N+ Univision
Noticiero N+ Univision: Edición Nocturna
Primer Impacto
Owner:TelevisaUnivision
Website:nmasunivision.com

N+ Univision is thenews division of AmericanSpanish-languagetelevision networkUnivision, a division ofTelevisaUnivision. The news division is based out of the network's facilities, referred to as the "NewsPort", in theMiami suburb ofDoral,Florida, which it currently shares with Univision'sflagshipowned-and-operated stationWLTV-DT.

The division's flagship program isNoticiero Univision, consisted of two nightly evening newscasts (airing in the early and late evening) focusing on international news and stories of relevance to the network's main target demographic ofHispanic and Latino Americans. Other programs produced by the news division includemorning news-talk show¡Despierta América!,newsmagazine seriesPrimer Impacto andAquí y Ahora, andSunday morning political affairs programAl Punto con Jorge Ramos.

N+ Univision maintains bureaus located at many of the network's television stations across theUnited States (particularly those owned by parent subsidiary Univision Television Group, that serve as owned-and-operated stations of the network) and throughoutLatin America. Noticiero Univision also has news share agreements with many of the national terrestrial networks in those same nations and will often carry their footage and reporting with credit. Noticias Univision uses content fromMexico-based broadcaster (and Univision's major content partner)Televisa,Venezuela-basedVenevision,Colombia-basedRCN TV,Peru-basedAmérica Televisión, and regional-wideCNN en Español.

The division's tagline is "Ahora somos más" ("Now, we are more").

Overview

[edit]

The national newscasts began onKMEX-DT in June 1, 1981 when the network was known as the Spanish International Network, and before the network's name change in 1987 was known asNoticiero Nacional SIN. In 1987, Televisa ownerEmilio Azcárraga Milmo, who also oversaw SIN (then a subsidiary of theMexico City-based company), appointed former Televisa news anchor Jacobo Zabludovsky asdirector of SIN's news division; the move met with protest among staff at the news division, concerned over the extent of the autonomy of SIN's news department and potential censorship in its journalistic practices (specifically, the reporting on theFidel Castro regime inCuba, which while recognized in Mexico, did not have aspects that led to the migration of Cubans to the United States), with most news staffers opting to quit.[2]

After Azcárraga and Emilio Nicolas, Sr. subsequently sold their interests in SIN parent Spanish International Communications toHallmark Cards after theFederal Communications Commission (FCC) and theU.S. Justice Department asked them to sell the network to a U.S.-based company amid inquiries as to whether Nicolas was being used by the Azcárraga family to skirt the FCC's rules prohibiting foreign ownership of broadcast media, in 1987, the newly renamed Univision appointed Roberto FE Soto – a former producer atNBC News – to produce a revamped flagship evening newscast,Noticiero Univision, the latter becoming the network's youngest executive; the network also reassignedJorge Ramos – then the host of the network's first attempt at amorning program, the two-hour-longMundo Latino – and hired veteran journalistMaria Elena Salinas (the latter of whom replaced Teresa Rodriguez as anchor) to co-anchor the evolving network newscast.[2]

Logo used from January 29, 2019 to January 11, 2026

Univision eventually decided to expand its news programming to afternoons; in 1992, the network debutedNoticias y Más ("News and More"), anchored byJackie Nespral, Ambrosio Hernandez andRaúl Peimbert;Myrka Dellanos joined the program after Nespral's departure later that year. Hernandez and Peimbert left Univision in 1993 to join Telemundo, while Nespral became co-host of the weekend edition ofNBC'sToday. Univision had other plans for the moribund show: the network revamped its format, changed its name and its theme music, and hiredPuerto Rican-bornMaría Celeste Arrarás as a weekend reporter to serve as Dellanos' partner; the retooled newsmagazine series becamePrimer Impacto ("First Impact") in February 1994.[3]

Then on April 14, 1997, Univision replaced reruns of Televisa-produced children's programs (such asPlaza Sesamo {the Latin American version ofSesame Street}) and re-entered into the morning news arena for the first time in eight years with the premiere of¡Despierta América! ("Wake Up America!"). Maintaining a format similar to its English language counterparts, it was designed to compete with (and was loosely based on the format of)Today,ABC'sGood Morning America andCBSThis Morning, with a focus on the network's Hispanic and Latino target demographic. The program quickly grew into a major competitor, increasing Univision's viewership in its morning time period by more than 46% by April 1998, and developed a unique style in its reporting of various types of news stories (including health, lifestyle, fashion, beauty and entertainment news, the latter of which was featured as part of a segment called "échate pa' acá" ("Come here") with a focus on popular Latino actors and musicians).[4][5]

In 1998, Univision premiered a prime time investigative news magazineAquí y Ahora ("Here & Now"), which focuses on in-depth investigative pieces and interviews with newsmakers. From 2000 to 2010, Univision was the only major U.S. broadcast network to increase its news viewership, while its English-language counterparts on ABC, NBC and CBS each lost half of their total viewership.[6] By the early 2000s, as the network expanded its national reach through the signing of new over-the-air affiliates, Univision's news programs had grown to regularly outrank its Spanish-language competitors, with the early-evening edition ofNoticiero Univision often placing ahead of its English language rivals (NBC Nightly News,ABC World News Tonight and theCBS Evening News) among viewers in the 18-49 age demographic. On September 9, 2007, the network premiered the firstSunday morning talk show on Spanish-language American television,Al Punto ("On Point"), a program moderated by Jorge Ramos that features discussions on political and socioeconomic issues pertinent to Latino Americans.[7]

On December 9, 2010, Univision announced that it had hiredIsaac Lee as the president of its news division;[8] His duties were expanded upon on October 4, 2013, when he was namedchief executive officer of its new cable news channelFusion, and further in February 2015, when he became president of Univision's digital media operations through a reorganization of that division.[9][10]

In March 2011, the network hosted its first Presidential town hall meeting; the televised special – which was watched by more than 2.7 million viewers, and featured anchor Jorge Ramos andPresidentBarack Obama – focused on the future of education in the United States.[11] Noticias Univision would later produce two town hall debates between presidential incumbent Obama andRepublican challengerMitt Romney the following year in the run-up to the2012 Presidential elections.

Also in 2011, Noticias Univision formed two new departments within the news division: an investigative reporting unit, which was led byPulitzer Prize winner Gerardo Reyes, and a documentary unit, which produced several critically acclaimed films on issues affecting the Latin American and international communities.[6][12] The division's expanded commitment to investigative journalism helped Noticias Univision earn multiple journalism awards since 2012 includingPeabody andInvestigative Reporters and Editors Awards for its investigative piece onOperation Fast and Furious, two Gracie Awards, a Cronkite Award for Excellence in Political Journalism and fourteen other award wins for five documentaries produced by both units.[13][14][15][16][17] In addition, theAcademy of Television Arts and Sciences honored Jorge Ramos and Maria Elena Salinas withLifetime Achievement Awards at the33rd News & Documentary Emmy Awards in 2012.[18]

In March 2013, Noticias Univision andParticipant Media announced a partnership to co-produce ten, one-hour documentaries to air onPivot Channel in English and onUnivision in Spanish. Three months later, in June of that year, the Documentary Unit producedViolación de un Sueño ("Rape in the Fields"), which was produced in partnership with thePBS documentary programFrontline and theCenter for Investigative Reporting.[19]

Programming

[edit]

Noticiero N+ Univision

[edit]
Main article:Noticiero N+ Univision

The network's flagship newscast,Noticiero N+ Univision, is a traditional evening news program that provides a general rundown of the day's news headlines, with more of a bent towards stories occurring in Latin America and, domestically, news stories and issues of utmost importance to Hispanic and Latino Americans. Because of this, reports focusing onimmigration and diplomatic relations with Latin America are regularly highlighted on the program, in addition to issues relating to government,healthcare and economic issues. The main early-evening broadcast of the program is currently co-anchored byJorge Ramos andMaria Elena Salinas (who have shared those duties since 1986, a departure from the traditional single-anchor format used by theeveningnewscasts of its English language competitorsABC,NBC andCBS), andFélix de Bedout and Arantxa Loizaga on weekend evenings. The program is on equal footing with the English language newscasts ratings-wise in urban areas with a large Hispanic population, often being the top network newscast in areas such asNew York City,Chicago,Los Angeles,San Francisco,San Antonio,Dallas,Houston,Tulsa,Oklahoma City,Philadelphia,Indianapolis,South Bend,Cleveland,Atlanta,Nashville,Washington, D.C.,Denver,Phoenix,Tucson,Raleigh,Minneapolis,Boston,Salt Lake City,Sacramento,San Diego,Las Vegas,Orlando,Tampa andMiami.

A secondary late-night edition of the program,Noticiero N+ Univision: Edición Nocturna ("N+ Univision News: Evening Edition"), airs nightly at 11:30 p.m. Eastern and Pacific Time (with a rebroadcast at 4:30 a.m. local time). The program – which is one of only two traditional national newscasts among the major U.S. broadcast networks (alongsideHechos on competitorAzteca) that airs in a late-evening time slot – maintains a similar format to the early-evening edition, with more of a focus on major news headlines; however, the program utilizes separate anchors from the early broadcast for the weeknight editions. From 1999 to 2011, the late-evening newscast was known asNoticiero Univision Ultima Hora, maintaining an in-depth, investigative focus anchored byEnrique Gratas.

Current programs

[edit]
  • Noticiero N+ Univision (1981–present; originally titledNoticiero Nacional SIN from 1981 to 1987)
  • Noticiero N+ Univision: Edición Nocturna (2009–present)
  • Noticiero N+ Univision: Edición Digital (September 12, 2016–present)
  • Al Punto ("To the Point"; 2007–present) – a Sunday morningpolitical and cultural affairs program, hosted by Jorge Ramos (it was the only Spanish language Sunday morning talk show on U.S. television untilTelemundo debutedEnfoque in 2011)
  • ¡Despierta América! (1997–present) – a morning news and lifestyle program featuring half-hourly news updates from Noticias Univision
  • Primer Impacto (1994–present) – an hour-long newsmagazine on Monday through Friday afternoons (which originally aired as a seven-day-a-week broadcast until 2007), focusing on news headlines, caught-on-tape stories, feature segments and entertainment stories
  • Primer Impacto Extra (1994–present) – a condensed half-hour edition ofPrimer Impacto (which airs in place of late local newscasts on affiliates without their own news department or which choose to preempt regularly scheduled local newscasts on certain holidays).
  • Aquí y Ahora ("Here and Now"; 2001–present) – a Sunday evening investigative newsmagazine

Noticias N+ Univision also produces 60-second news capsules (titledBreve Informativo de Noticiero N+ Univision, or "N+ Univision News Brief") that air during commercial breaks – except those featured during theNoticiero N+ Univision-branded early and late newscasts – each hour throughout the broadcast day on Univision, and providesspecial report cut-ins within regular programming if needed during breaking news events. Some newsmagazine programs produced byTelevisa (such asHoy andTras la Verdad) also air as part of the network's schedule.

Former programming

[edit]
  • Noticias y Más (1990–1994)
  • Noticiero Univision: Última Hora (1999–2011)

Other services

[edit]

Fusion

[edit]
Main article:Fusion (TV channel)

Fusion is adigital cable andsatellite television channel operated by Fusion Media Network, LLC, ajoint venture betweenUnivision Communications and theDisney-ABC Television Group subsidiary ofThe Walt Disney Company, which launched on October 28, 2013. Relying in part on the resources of the news divisions operated by the respective companies,ABC News and Noticias Univision, the network carries a broad mix of news, lifestyle,pop culture, satire and entertainment programs aimed atEnglish-speakingmillennial adults between the ages of 18 and 34 (marking Univision's first major push into English-language programming), including those ofHispanic and Latino American heritage.[20][21][22][23][24] Fusion operates out of Noticias Univision's "Newsport" facility in Doral, Florida;[25] although, while Univision handles programming responsibilities for Fusion and Disney-ABC Television Group provides advertising sales and distribution for the channel, it operates independently from ABC News and Noticias Univision, employing its own hosts and correspondents, management, production staff andboard of directors.[26]

In December 2010, Noticias Univision president Isaac Lee announced plans to start an English language cable news channel aimed at American Hispanics;[27] afterUnivision Communications reached an agreement withThe Walt Disney Company to partner in the development of the channel,[28] the two companies formally announced its launch on May 8, 2012.[29] Through its focused target demographic, which is regarded as being fluent in digital consumption and favors social media and internet sources over traditional broadcast and print media for receiving news content, the network operates FusionLive, an online and mobile streaming service available tosubscribers of participating cable and satellite providers.[30]

Univision Noticias

[edit]

Univision Noticias is a planned Spanish languagecable news channel, which Univision Communications announced on May 19, 2011, in a press release mentioning the launch of three specialty cable channels.[31] Univision secured a carriage deal with satellite providerDish Network to carry Univision Noticias and sister networksUnivision Deportes Network andUnivision tlnovelas in January 2012; As of October 2015[update], however, the network has not yet launched.[32][33]

Univision News (website)

[edit]

Noticias Univision also maintains a separate website – powered through a partnership withTumblr – and a companionTwitter feed, under the bannerUnivision News.[34][35] The website and feed provides national and international news content presented in English, intended to cater to Hispanics and other news consumers not fluent in the Spanish language.

The Root

[edit]

On May 21, 2015, Univision Communications announced that it would acquireThe Root, a magazine-style news and culture website aimed at African-Americans, from the Slate Group division ofGraham Holdings Company (whose chairman and CEO,Donald E. Graham, co-founded the site withHenry Louis Gates Jr. in 2008). The deal will allow The Root to use Univision Communications' digital production facilities and publishing infrastructure, although it will maintain editorial autonomy over its content and its existing editorial staff (including managing editor Lyne Pitts and publisher and vice president of digital content Donna Byrd, the latter of whom was also appointed as a member of the Univision Digital division's management staff).[36][37][38]

On–air staff

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Notable current on–air staff

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Notable former on–air staff

[edit]
Indicates person is deceased

Bureaus

[edit]

Major bureaus

[edit]

Minor bureaus (within the United States)

[edit]

1All Univisionowned-and-operated stations are considered bureaus of Noticias Univision, including those not listed here.

Criticism and controversies

[edit]

Dispute with Donald Trump and criticism of Jorge Ramos

[edit]
See also:Jorge Ramos (news anchor)

AfterDonald Trump launched his candidacy for theRepublican presidential nomination in June 2015, Noticias Univision lead anchor Jorge Ramos pursued an interview with Trump to discussthe comments he made in his declaratory campaign speech disparaging Mexican immigrants, accusing Mexico of sending criminals, rapists and drug importers to the United States (which led Univision Communications to terminate its contract to air theMiss USA andMiss Universe pageants, which were set to air on sister networkUniMás through a five-year deal signed that February, and prohibit its employees from conducting company business at Trump-owned hotels or resorts; Trump subsequently filed a $500 millionbreach of contract lawsuit against Univision over the contract termination). On June 26, Trump posted a handwritten correspondence letter sent by Ramos, requesting an interview with him, onInstagram, which contained Ramos' personal cell phone number for business use (which was unobscured), before deleting the post.[39][40][41][42][43]

At apress conference held by Trump on August 25, 2015 at the Grand River Center inDubuque, Iowa, Ramos – attempting to ask a question to Trump about his immigration policies without being called on beforehand, as Trump had pointed to another reporter in the audience – was rebuffed by Trump, who repeatedly asked Ramos to sit down and remarked to him to "go back to Univision." Security present at the conference escorted Ramos out of the hotel's conference room, where one member of the security team (whom campaign officials denied was a Trump staffer) told Mexican-born Ramos – who became an American citizen in 2008 – to "get out of my country." An aide for Trump invited Ramos to re-enter the conference about 15 minutes later on the pretense that he wait to be called upon, engaging in a heated exchange with Trump on his hardline stance on immigration when asked to field a question. In a series of interviews regarding his removal from the press conference, Ramos accused Trump of "spreading hate" and questioned the feasibility of Trump's campaign proposals to conduct massdeportations ofundocumented families and repeal a statute in theU.S. Constitution grantingbirthright citizenship, later citing a poll which indicated 75% of prospective Latino voters held unfavorable opinions of him regarding Trump's viability as a presidential candidate.[44][45][46] In a statement supporting Ramos, Univision chief executive officerRandy Falco blasted his treatment by Trump, calling it "beneath contempt" and suggesting that Trump comport himself better with members of the press as his campaign continues, stating "Mr. Trump demonstrated complete disregard for [Ramos] and for the countless Hispanics whom Jorge seeks to represent through press questions that are at the heart of theFirst Amendment."[47]

As he has gained visibility in the general journalistic community in recent years, Ramos has received criticism of his balancing of journalistic ethics and anadvocacy approach in his reporting (such as his criticism of the lack of Latino moderators for theU.S. presidential debates in which he stated that those sanctioning the debates were "stuck in the 1950s", and his challenging of presidential candidatesBarack Obama andMitt Romney's immigration policies in a Univision-produced political forum in which Ramos served as a moderator), withLuis Silberwasser, president of rival network Telemundo (whose executive vice president of network news, Luis Carlos Velez, also made veiled criticisms that Univision was not promoting "fair, balanced and objective journalism"), citing a poll of Hispanic and Latino adults conducted in conjunction with sister network NBC andThe Wall Street Journal that stated immigration, as while being important, was "not [a] defining issue, as other media outlets would lead you to believe" in the 2016 election season. Similarly as did Trump, Ramos was criticized for his line of questioning at the Dubuque conference, with syndicated columnist Ruben Navarrette, Jr. stating that Ramos acted "unprofessional" and "play[ed] into every negative stereotype that Americans subscribe to about Mexicans;"Fox News media criticHoward Kurtz stating that Ramos had behaved "like a heckler;"CNN political commentatorJeffrey Lord accusing Ramos of playing the "race card" despite being a "blue-eyed, light-skinned[...] European Mexican" and "dividing the country by race;" andPolitico writer Marc Caputo calling Ramos biased for his open support for immigration reform, althoughIntercept writer Glenn Greenwald defended him, pointing out American journalists such asThomas Paine andEdward R. Murrow who have balanced opinion and advocacy. Ramos stated in regards to his approach to journalism, "Our position is clearly pro-Latino or pro-immigrant ... We are simply being the voice of those who don't have a voice";[48][49][50] in an October 2015New Yorker interview, Ramos also noted that Latino Americans "have almost no political representation", specifically criticizing Republican candidatesMarco Rubio andTed Cruz for not "defend[ing] the undocumented."[2]

A situation similar to that of the Dubuque incident involving Ramos occurred on October 24, 2015, as news crews belonging to Noticias Univision and Miami owned-and-operated station WLTV-DT – although the division and station were reportedly given media clearance to cover the event – was ordered to leave a campaign event held for Trump at the hotel on theTrump National Doral Miami complex (located near Univision's Doral studios) by an off-duty police officer who informed them that they were not allowed on the property.[51][52]

See also

[edit]
  • Fusion – an English-language news channel jointly operated by Univision andABC News launched on October 28, 2013
  • Univision Noticias – a planned Spanish-language cable and satellite news channel.

References

[edit]
  1. ^TelevisaUnivision (January 6, 2026)."Univision News Strengthens Its Leadership in the U.S. Hispanic Market and Rebrands as N+ Univision". RetrievedJanuary 9, 2026.
  2. ^abcWilliam Finnegan (October 5, 2015)."The Man Who Wouldn't Sit Down".The New Yorker.Condé Nast. RetrievedNovember 10, 2015.
  3. ^"Los inicios de Primer Impacto".Noticias Univision. Univision Communications. January 26, 2014.
  4. ^Kevin Baxter (September 21, 1998)."Spanish-Language Networks Seek Wider Niche".Los Angeles Times. Archived fromthe original on May 29, 2014. RetrievedNovember 7, 2015.
  5. ^Kevin Baxter (April 14, 1998)."'Despierta' Wakes Up Ratings".Los Angeles Times. RetrievedNovember 7, 2015.
  6. ^abAnna Marie de la Fuente (August 27, 2011)."Univision bets big on news".Variety. Penske Media Corporation. RetrievedNovember 10, 2015.
  7. ^"Univision Premieres Weekly Sunday Morning Discussion Program "Al Punto" This Sunday, September 9th".Univision PR (Press release). Univision Communications. September 6, 2007. RetrievedFebruary 28, 2015.
  8. ^"Isaac Lee, President of News – Univision Executive Management". Univision Communications. RetrievedNovember 10, 2015.
  9. ^"Isaac Lee Named CEO of Fusion". Univision Communications. October 4, 2013 – viaBusiness Wire.
  10. ^George Winslow (February 9, 2015)."Univision Promotes Digital Execs".Broadcasting & Cable.NewBay Media.
  11. ^"Univision's Landmark Education Town Hall with President Barack Obama Emphasizes Parental Engagement; More Than 2.7 Million Tune In" (Press release). Univision Communications. March 29, 2011. RetrievedNovember 7, 2015.
  12. ^"Univision News Investigation Into Operation Fast and Furious; New Weapons Revealed".ABC News. The Walt Disney Company. RetrievedNovember 10, 2015.
  13. ^Andrew Edgecliffe-Johnson (April 12, 2013)."Univision of the Future".Financial Times.Pearson PLC.
  14. ^"72nd Annual Peabody Awards: Complete List of Winners".Henry W. Grady College of Journalism and Mass Communication. April 2, 2014. RetrievedNovember 10, 2015.
  15. ^"2012 IRE Award winners".Investigative Reporters and Editors. RetrievedNovember 10, 2015.
  16. ^"2013 Gracie Awards Winners".Gracie Awards. Alliance for Women in Media Foundation. Archived fromthe original on September 21, 2013. RetrievedNovember 10, 2015.
  17. ^"Cronkite Award 2013 Winners Announced".Cronkite Award for Excellence in Exploration and Journalism. Archived fromthe original on May 3, 2015. RetrievedNovember 10, 2015.
  18. ^Marisa Guthrie (June 28, 2012)."Univision's Jorge Ramos and Maria Elena Salinas to Get Lifetime Achievement Emmy".The Hollywood Reporter.Prometheus Global Media.
  19. ^"FRONTLINE and Univision News Present Rape in the Fields/Violación de un Sueño" (Press release). Univision Communications. June 10, 2013 – via Business Wire.
  20. ^Susanna Kim (February 11, 2013)."ABC and Univision Announce New Cable Network 'Fusion' Will Launch Later in 2013".ABC News (Press release).The Walt Disney Company. RetrievedFebruary 11, 2013.
  21. ^Veronica Villafane (March 5, 2013)."Fusion Gears Up For Late Summer Launch".TVNewsCheck. NewsCheck Media. RetrievedNovember 7, 2015.
  22. ^Meg James (August 1, 2013)."ABC-Univision cable network, FUSION, to launch Oct. 28".Los Angeles Times. RetrievedNovember 7, 2015.
  23. ^"ABC and Univision Announce New Network's Name".ABC News (Press release). The Walt Disney Company. February 11, 2013. RetrievedFebruary 11, 2013.
  24. ^Dylan Byers (February 11, 2013)."ABC/Univision reveal name of new channel".Politico.Capitol News Company. RetrievedFebruary 11, 2013.
  25. ^"ABC and Univision's love child bursts to life".Associated Press. October 19, 2013.
  26. ^Veronica Villafañe (March 2013)."Fusion names board of directors, reveals more details".Media Moves. RetrievedNovember 7, 2015.
  27. ^Veronica Villafañe (December 17, 2010)."Univision president says he'll start 24-hr news channel".Media Moves. RetrievedNovember 7, 2015.
  28. ^Georg Szalai (February 7, 2012)."ABC News, Univision Discussing English-Language News Network".The Hollywood Reporter.Prometheus Global Media. RetrievedMay 14, 2013.
  29. ^Meg James; Dawn Chmielewski (May 7, 2012)."ABC News, Univision to launch English-language news network".Los Angeles Times. RetrievedNovember 7, 2015.
  30. ^"About Fusion - FusionLive".FusionLive. Fusion Media Network, LLC. October 28, 2013. Archived fromthe original on December 3, 2013. RetrievedNovember 7, 2015 – viaTumblr.
  31. ^Meg James (May 19, 2011)."Univision plans three new cable TV channels".Los Angeles Times. RetrievedNovember 7, 2015.
  32. ^Meg James (January 9, 2012)."Dish Network to distribute new Univision channels".Los Angeles Times. RetrievedNovember 7, 2015.
  33. ^David Goetzl (January 9, 2012)."Univision Lands First Carriage Deal For New Networks".MediaNewsDaily. MediaPost Publications. RetrievedNovember 7, 2015.
  34. ^"Univision News in English". Noticias Univision – viaTumblr.
  35. ^"Univision News in English on Twitter". Noticias Univision – viaTwitter.
  36. ^George Winslow (May 21, 2015)."Univision Acquires The Root".Broadcasting & Cable.NewBay Media. RetrievedNovember 7, 2015.
  37. ^"Univision buys African-American news site The Root".Financial Times. March 22, 2015.
  38. ^Frank Pallotta (May 22, 2015)."Univision acquires African-American news site The Root".CNN Money.Time Warner. RetrievedNovember 7, 2015.
  39. ^Margaret Hartmann (August 26, 2015)."'Go Back to Univision': Trump Boots Journalist Jorge Ramos From Press Conference".New York. New York Media, LLC.
  40. ^Meg James (June 25, 2015)."Univision cuts ties with Trump, Miss USA pageant over Mexican remarks".Los Angeles Times.
  41. ^Dominic Patten (June 30, 2015)."Donald Trump Hits Univision With $500M Miss USA Lawsuit, Network Calls It "Ridiculous" – Update".Deadline Hollywood. Penske Media Corporation.
  42. ^Jessika Walsten (June 30, 2015)."Trump, Miss Universe Organization Sue Univision for $500 Million".Broadcasting & Cable.NewBay Media.
  43. ^Amanda Batchelor (June 26, 2015)."Trump bans Univision employees from Trump National Doral".WPLG.BH Media. RetrievedJune 27, 2015.
  44. ^Trip Gabriel (August 25, 2015)."At Donald Trump Event, Jorge Ramos of Univision Is Snubbed, Ejected and Debated".The New York Times.
  45. ^"Trump clashes with reporter: who was wrong?".Morning Joe (MSNBC).NBC News Group, LLC. August 26, 2015.
  46. ^Marcela Valdes (September 25, 2015)."Jorge Ramos's Long Game".The New York Times.ISSN 0362-4331. RetrievedNovember 7, 2015.
  47. ^Brian Steinberg (August 27, 2015)."Univision CEO: Donald Trump's Treatment of Jorge Ramos 'Beneath Contempt'".Variety. Penske Media Corporation. RetrievedNovember 7, 2015.
  48. ^Meg James (June 3, 2013)."Univision's Jorge Ramos a powerful voice on immigration".Los Angeles Times.
  49. ^Erik Wemple (September 30, 2015)."Telemundo takes some not-so-veiled shots at Univision".The Washington Post.Nash Holdings, LLC. RetrievedNovember 7, 2015.
  50. ^Eric Hananoki (August 27, 2015)."CNN Analyst Attacks Jorge Ramos For "Race Card Playing" Even Though He's A "Blue-Eyed, Light-Skinned" "European Mexican"".Media Matters. RetrievedNovember 7, 2015.
  51. ^"Univision crew booted from Donald Trump campaign event".The Philadelphia Inquirer. Philadelphia Media Network, LLC. October 24, 2015. RetrievedNovember 7, 2015 – via Variety.
  52. ^Lisa de Moraes (October 23, 2015)."Univision Anchor Jorge Ramos Tweets They Got Tossed From Tonight's Trump Event".Deadline Hollywood. Penske Media Corporation. RetrievedNovember 7, 2015.

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