1 Since the middle of the 1990s, Hispanic radio and television in the United States 
have grown significantly.  The nation's leading Spanish-language radio network 
reported a 34 percent increase in listeners in just seven years.  According to 
Hispanic Radio Today, over 95 percent of all Hispanic Americans have access to 
Spanish-language radio stations.  Hispanic American television also has mushroomed.  
The largest Hispanic television network in the country reported a 50 percent increase 
in stations in one year, while a second Hispanic TV company, created in 2002, was 
reaching over 85 percent of Hispanic Americans just four years later.
2 These companies began as small ventures to broadcast programming for what was once 
viewed as a specialized market.  Now they are being acquired by multibillion dollar 
corporations that see substantial economic opportunities in the growing Hispanic 
community. With estimates of Hispanic American buying power exceeding one trillion 
dollars annually, many businesses have developed advertising aimed specifically at 
Hispanic consumers.  Major corporations are also creating their own Spanish-language 
programming or buying out independent Hispanic media companies.  One national network 
paid $3 billion3 billion dollars to add one of the largest Hispanic television networks to its programming 
menu.
3 Yet Hispanic radio and television is as much about offering expanded choices to 
listeners and viewers as it is about Spanish-language programming.  Bilingual 
television viewers often switch back and forth between Spanish and English programs.  
One study found that 60 percent of bilingual speakers preferred watching the news in 
Spanish, despite the availability of English-language broadcasts; and the most 
popular national television programs all appear on Hispanic stations.  At the same 
time, adult Hispanic viewers watch English-language and Spanish-language movies with 
equal frequency, while their bilingual children spend more of their television hours 
watching mainstream English-language programming.
4 These differing and evolving preferences make it clear that the popularity of 
Hispanic radio and television is not so much about language as it is about choice 
and culture.  Businesses have responded by producing and airing bilingual commercials 
that run on both Spanish-language and English-language stations as well as commercials 
in English that focus on Hispanic American culture.  One major U.S. corporation, for 
example, aired a prime-time commercial on mainstream television featuring a Hispanic 
American family, despite predictions that Hispanic Americans would not be watching 
mainstream programming.
5 In fact, the opposite may be true.  Studies suggest that younger, American-born 
Hispanics are increasingly tuning into mainstream media.  Making up almost two-thirds 
of the total Hispanic population, these younger adults are more acculturated to 
American life than their parents, and are often equally at home with either Hispanic 
or mainstream radio and television.  Yet the familiar cultural context of Spanish-language 
media continues to attract a wide spectrum of Hispanic American listeners and viewers, 
suggesting that even as programming and advertising aimed at the Hispanic community become 
part of the mainstream media, the growth of Hispanic media is likely to continue for years 
to come.