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Articles tagged with: Spanish-language radio

Hispanic Radio »

[27 Mar 2012 | No Comment | ]

The Radio Ink Hispanic Radio Conference – March 21-22 in San Diego – is the ONLY conference devoted to Hispanic radio in America. Comprehensive coverage from Adam R Jacobson available here.

Featured, General, Hispanic Radio »

[7 Dec 2011 | No Comment | ]

Adelante Media Group, a media company serving Latino audiences with radio and television stations in Boise, Idaho; Milwaukee; Sacramento-Stockton-Modesto; Salt Lake City; Seattle; and Yakima-Pasco-Wenatchee, Washington, has released a specially produced report from the Adam R Jacobson Editorial Services and Research Consultancy that provides marketers and advertisers important insight and data on some of the nation’s top emerging Hispanic markets.

Featured, Hispanic Radio »

[11 Nov 2011 | No Comment | ]

Arbitron has released the 2011 edition of its Hispanic Radio Today report, offering an in-depth review of listening to Spanish-language and English-language radio stations by Latinos across the 50 states. Adam R Jacobson served as the Principal Analyst for this report; he has worked with Arbitron on Hispanic Radio Today since 2010.

Hispanic Radio »

[12 Oct 2011 | No Comment | ]

The greater the likelihood of a perceived benefit to the community, the greater the chance a Latino will participate in an Arbitron survey. That’s one of the key findings from Roslow Research Group president Peter Roslow, who worked with the radio ratings company to best explore how Arbitron can increase Latino diarykeeper participation in emerging Hispanic markets.

Hispanic Radio »

[22 Feb 2011 | No Comment | ]

More than ever Latinos across the U.S. can access audio programming via an ever-widening array of delivery vehicles. Yet as Arbitron points out in its recently released 2010 edition of Hispanic Radio Today, “radio’s reach among both English-dominant and Spanish-dominant listeners continues to land between 94 percent and 96 percent — a constant since Hispanic Radio Today’s first study back in the 1990s.”