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Spanish language radio?
Posted on 9/5/14 at 5:55 pm
Posted on 9/5/14 at 5:55 pm
I was looking through our press release for the Lamar game and noticed that we have Spanish language radio. Is this new? I've never noticed it before if it isn't.
Posted on 9/5/14 at 6:21 pm to daboman of Aggieland
Trying to steal the Mexicans from the sips one game at a time.
Posted on 9/5/14 at 6:33 pm to daboman of Aggieland
believe it is new this year. There was a release about it over the summer iirc. Smart move on our part imo as we can't ignore large swathes of our home state
Posted on 9/5/14 at 6:59 pm to daboman of Aggieland
Awesome. Now we can reach a mostly untapped market for future Aggies.
Posted on 9/5/14 at 9:38 pm to cardboardboxer
quote:
Awesome. Now we can reach a mostly untapped market for future Aggies.
no thanks.
Posted on 9/5/14 at 11:20 pm to CavalryAg07
I think it's a great idea. There's no reason that the Spanish speaking population of Texas shouldn't be buying A&M gear with their money.
Posted on 9/5/14 at 11:21 pm to CavalryAg07
quote:
no thanks.
why not?

Posted on 9/5/14 at 11:49 pm to CavalryAg07
Houston, Puro Pinche San Antonio, McAllen, Brownsville, Harlingen & El Paso in Texas and Reynosa, Matamoros, Valle Hermoso & Ciudad Juarez in Mexico all now have native coverage of A&M football in Spanish. If you ask me, that's huge. The U.S. Hispanic population is constantly assimilating to the American way of life; sports included. Its an untapped market that is going to continue to grow both in population and spending power. Ignoring and leaving that population for TCU and Texas to take all for themselves would be dumb of us.
Then you also have Mexico which is building a strong appetite for American sports such as American Football and Baseball. In towns such as Nuevo Laredo, Monterrey and Tijuana, one can argue that soccer is no longer the most popular sport. Overall, nice move by the administration to also include radio stations with adequate coverage on both sides of the border.
If you don't like, vete a la verga culero. It will always be a brave new world and you either adapt or die.
Then you also have Mexico which is building a strong appetite for American sports such as American Football and Baseball. In towns such as Nuevo Laredo, Monterrey and Tijuana, one can argue that soccer is no longer the most popular sport. Overall, nice move by the administration to also include radio stations with adequate coverage on both sides of the border.
If you don't like, vete a la verga culero. It will always be a brave new world and you either adapt or die.
Posted on 9/5/14 at 11:50 pm to greenbastard
quote:
Puro Pinche San Antonio
Mi gente, mi amor

This post was edited on 9/5/14 at 11:51 pm
Posted on 9/5/14 at 11:53 pm to TbirdSpur2010
Posted on 9/5/14 at 11:59 pm to greenbastard
All dat Tex-Mex cuisine
Churros, Chuckster
Some fricking latina smokeshows down there too tho

Churros, Chuckster

Some fricking latina smokeshows down there too tho

Posted on 9/6/14 at 1:14 am to greenbastard
quote:Pretty much this.
If you don't like, vete a la verga culero.

I appreciate the opportunity to listen to Aggie football in the mother tongue. It's easier for me to decipher Spanish than it is to decipher Dave South.
Posted on 9/6/14 at 3:09 am to ImperialPalace
quote:
It's easier for me to decipher Spanish than it is to decipher Dave South.
You know what? That's true for me too

Plus, announcers in other languages get so much more hyped during their broadcasts

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