History
After acquiring the television station XHRAE from Raúl Aréchiga Espinoza on July 18, 2006, GEA relaunched XHRAE-TV under the name ''CadenaTres'' (lit. ''Network Three'') on May 28, 2007. Its goal was to become the third major national private-owned network in Mexico (hence the name). In order to achieve said goal, Grupo Imagen (GEA's multimedia branch) created a full commercial schedule for the general audience which included newscasts, films, sports, comedy shows, dramas, telenovelas, political satire, daytime programming and children and teens programming. Throughout its run, several associations with international networks and production companies enriched CadenaTres programming. The network's coverage expanded from Mexico City to the entire Mexican republic through various cable television systems and its three broadcast affiliates in Baja California, Chihuahua and Sonora. It struggled to become a major network against fierce completion from the "duopoly" of TV Azteca and Televisa and laws that prevented to easily acquire stations throughout the country (namely, the Federal Telecommunications Act better known as the Televisa Law). By September 30, 2009, its flagship station had changed its call sign to XHTRES-TV from XHRAE, reflecting its network identity. The goal of becoming "The Third Network" finally materialized for Grupo Imagen, thanks to the 2013 Federal Telecommunications Act that ordered the creation of two nationwide over-the-air digital networks. On March 11, 2015, Grupo Imagen was granted the operation of one of the networks that would carry the CadenaTres signal nationwide over-the-air. However, in a sudden and unexpected decision, Grupo Imagen shut down CadenaTres on October 26, 2015, and replaced its feed in its flagship channel (XHTRES Channel 28) with the Excélsior TV news network. Except for their news anchors and paid programming (infomercials, TV ministries), all of CadenaTres programming suddenly ended its run. Allegedly, about 300 employees lost their jobs with the shutdown.Programming
Newscasts
CadenaTres had three daily newscasts, early morning, afternoon and nightly, as well as hourly recaps. The main newscasts were the afternoon (led by Yuriria Sierra) and nightly programs. The nightly newscast had various anchors throughout its run, being the most important Pedro Ferriz de Con, Pablo Hiriart, and toward the end of the channel's life, Francisco Zea. They were famous for their rather aggressive and opinionated editorials by the anchors for nearly every report.Sports
Boxing and wrestling were the first major sports programming on CadenaTres (aired on Saturday evenings). After Grupo Imagen acquired Querétaro FC,Telenovelas
Thanks to several associations with Latin American networks such as Venevision, Televen, Telemundo and RCN (Colombia), CadenaTres aired several telenovelas and drama series. The last of these series was RCN's El Estilista, which was cut short on October 23, 2015. On January 20, 2010, Argos and CadenaTres signed and agreement to create new and exclusive content for the network. Shows such as Las Aparicio (2010), El Sexo Débil (2011) and El octavo mandamiento (2011) enjoyed both critical and audience acclaim.Comedy and political satire
Arguably, CadenaTres's major success was the political satire show ''Mikorte Informativo'', a newscast parody inspired by ''The Planet of the Apes'' that featured three news anchors with a simian appearance that came from the planet ''Mikón'' and criticized the news every week, mostly national news (similar to SNL's Weekend Update). It first aired on November 29, 2009. The success of ''Mikorte Informativo'' spun-off the creation of a weekend programming block known as ''Barra Desinformativa'' (Misinformation Block) in 2014. It featured two new shows that were very similar to the format of ''Mikorte'': ''El Incorrecto'' (hosted by Eduardo Videgaray and José Ramón San Cristóbal, originally aired on E! Latino) and ''Ya ni llorar es bueno'' (hosted by stand-up comedian Gon Curiel). A short-lived venture with production company ''Adicta Films'' in 2012 led to the creation of two original sitcoms: ''El Albergue'' and ''La Clínica''. These were generally panned by both critics and the audience.International programming
An association with Sony Entertainment Television Latin America allowed CadenaTres to acquire shows such as The Shield and CSI: New York and the reality show Latin American Idol around 2010/2011. Up to its final date, CadenaTres acquired several old American sitcoms to create a ''Retro'' programming block. The block featured the shows ''Daytime and entertainment
Daytime television was also produced. It featured morning variety-talk shows such as ''Bien familiar'' (hosted by Fernanda Familiar in 2008) and Nuestro Día (hosted by Martha Figueroa up to the shutdown of the network in 2015). It also featured the successful cooking show ''Cocinemos Juntos'' hosted by Many Muñoz that aired from 2011 to October 23, 2015. Show business-related shows were led by Gustavo Adolfo Infante. Infante hosted the daily gossip show ''No lo cuentes'' and the weekly interview talk show ''En compañia de...''.Children's programming
CadenaTres originally aired cartoons weekdays around 2:00 to 4:00 p.m. Thanks to their alliance with Sony, vintage shows such as '' The Real Ghostbusters'' and ''Teen programming
CadenaTres aired shows produced by Epic Network aimed at a younger audience. The featured shows were: ''Gamer#Tag'' and ''CTRLGAMER'' (videogames), ''Japantastic'' (Asian pop culture), ''TechCity'' (gadgets), LOL TV (social networks) and ''top diez'' (music). This programming block was enjoying a growing success up to the network's final date. After the network shutdown, these shows are still being produced and are available on-demand and were picked by former CadenaTres affiliate, Canal 44 of Ciudad Juárez, Chihuahua, Mexico.Slogans
* 2007-2008: Cadena Tres, La Televisión Abierta. (Cadena Tres, Open Television) * 2008-2009: Encadenate a Cadena Tres. (Connect to Cadena Tres) * 2009-2010: Somos Cadena Tres y estamos en el 28 (We are Cadena Tres and we are on 28) * 2010–2015: La Televisión más abierta que nunca (Television more open than ever)Cadenatres affiliates
Cadenatres had three informal affiliates in 2014, which broadcast some of its programs:References
External links