Meet the collaborative

Meet the collaborative

Broadcasters and More

A Growing Network of News and Content Producers – Digital, Radio, TV, and Print

At LMC, we’re building a brighter future for Latino media—and the communities it serves. As the nation’s leading advocate for sustainable journalism, we forge powerful collaborations with over 25 Latino networks and media outlets representing over 100 TV, radio, digital, and print platforms. Together, we’re transforming the media landscape by championing policies that uplift Latino voices, providing capacity-building support, and creating opportunities for direct funding, joint media projects, and innovative storytelling. Our mission is clear: to inform, empower, and serve Latino communities across the country. Explore our network of partners below and see how we’re making an impact together!

  • Founded in 1986, Alianza Metropolitan News is a bilingual community newspaper in print and online. Since 2006, it has earned 70 national Excellence in Journalism awards. These honors come from organizations such as the National Association of Hispanic Publications and New America Media. The paper covers local Bay Area news as well as state and national issues. Based in Silicon Valley, it promotes diversity, inclusion, and equality.

  • El Popular is an innovative weekly newspaper serving the Latino communities in Western Kern County. El Popular is an independent newspaper of General Circulation published every Friday. Founded August 26, 1983 by Raul R. Camacho, Sr. and the late Raul M. Camacho, Jr.

    George M. Camacho, Sr. is the president of our parent Company, El Popular, Inc., incorporated in 1997.

    El Popular is the largest circulated ethnic print publication in Kern County, California. Serving the Latino communities of Arvin, Lamont, Bakersfield, Shafter, Wasco, McFarland, and Delano.

  • Since its founding in August 1990, Vida en el Valle has continually evolved, starting as a print publication with stories in both English and Spanish. It launched a website in 1995 to expand its reach, and two decades ago, it introduced zoned editions in Merced and Modesto, later expanding to Stockton and Sacramento. Three years ago, the Vida en el Vallewebsite became part of The Fresno Bee, further broadening its audience. Over the years, the publication has issued more than 1,300 editions, covering a wide range of topics, and has won 14 José Martí awards for being the nation's best bilingual newspaper, along with numerous other accolades from the National Association of Hispanic Publications.

  • The largest Hispanic newspaper in San Diego and the largest Hispanic-owned Spanish-language publication in California. For 22 years, it has delivered accurate, relevant news to the local Hispanic community, with a weekly audited circulation of 77,894. El Latino also hosts ¡Celebrando!, an annual interactive health and beauty event for Latinas, and is 100% minority- and women-owned.

  • Pomona’s only community newspaper, has published monthly since 2009 and is the city’s unofficial newspaper of record. It has more readers in Pomona than any other print publication, including daily papers. Building on the legacy of the original La Voz, it continues to fill the gap left by reduced local coverage as mainstream outlets scale back.

  • El Informador Del Valle is entering its 27th year of service and has firmly established itself as the voice of the Latino communities in the Inland and Coachella Valleys. As major print media outlets experience declining readership in ethnic communities, El Informador del Valle has become the primary alternative for local news. It stands out as the oldest 100% Spanish/Latino-owned and operated newspaper in the region, effectively serving the Latino markets of Inland and Coachella Valleys.

  • The Latino Times is written by/for bilingual, bi-cultural Latinos for Latinos in business, community and civic organizations, students and faculty as well as other professionals from San Joaquin, Stanislaus and Sacramento Counties. It is the only bilingual, 100% minority owned publication in Northern California and the Central Valley.

  • A newspaper of historical dimensions, the San Fernando Sun has been publishing continuously since 1904 reflecting the valley’s historical and cultural development. Today, as in those pioneering days, the weekly San Fernando Sun leads the valley residents with insightful editorial, community involvement and valuable consumer information.

local outlets

  • TBA

  • Hispanic LA, an independent digital newsroom founded in Los Angeles in 2009. It serves Spanish-speaking Americans, Latinos across the Americas, and readers in Spain. The outlet features contributions from more than 300 writers. It publishes opinion and reporting on U.S. politics, Los Angeles, Mexico, El Salvador, Latin America, the arts, and community life. Since relaunching in 2018, HISPANIC LA has produced over 2,000 articles, most of them in Spanish. It reaches about 450,000 monthly visitors, along with thousands of followers and subscribers.

  • Radio Bilingüe is the leading Latino public radio network and Spanish content producer in U.S. public media. Produced by and for diverse Latinos, Radio Bilingüe’s airwaves offer vibrant music, news and information, and forums for Latino voices. In Spanish, English, Mixteco and Triqui, Radio Bilingüe fosters the kinds of inclusive dialogue needed for a healthy democracy. Support our work now!

  • El Nuevo Sol is a multimedia website run by students in the Spanish-language journalism program at California State University, Northridge. Established in 2003, El Nuevo Sol has three main objectives: (1) to contribute to better and more accurate news coverage of Latino communities in the United States, including young Latinos in Southern California; (2) to provide a platform for students in the program to disseminate and showcase their journalistic work; and (3) to practice socially responsible journalism that reports truthfully from a critical and independent perspective, providing meaningful context to stories that are usually ignored or underestimated by the mainstream press.

  • Kern Sol News is a youth-led media outlet based in Kern County, launched in 2011 with support from The California Endowment. A fiscally sponsored project of Community Initiatives, Kern Sol News amplifies youth voices to highlight health disparities in underserved communities. Youth journalists engage decision-makers and challenge inequitable systems by reporting on issues such as safe drinking water, school funding equity, health care access, and well-maintained parks.

  • El Observador is a bilingual print and online newspaper founded in 1980 and the first bilingual weekly in the San Francisco Bay Area. Now the region’s largest bilingual weekly, it serves Hispanic communities through print, digital, and social platforms. Based in San Jose, El Observador partners with government, education, and business organizations to provide trusted, nonpartisan news, outreach, and community resources across the Bay Area’s nine counties.

  • Impulso Newspaper is a Spanish-language outlet based in Los Angeles, founded in 2004 to serve Southern California’s Oaxacan indigenous and Latino communities. As the region’s only newspaper dedicated to nearly 250,000 Oaxacan residents, Impulso documents community history, elevates civic engagement, and reports on issues including immigration, health, education, climate, and culture. With deep roots in underserved neighborhoods, Impulso provides independent, community-centered journalism that amplifies voices often overlooked by mainstream media.

  • El Tímpano is a community-centered journalism organization launched in 2018 through a participatory design process with Oakland’s Latino and Mayan immigrant communities. It surfaces residents’ questions and stories, delivers actionable local and national news, and investigates community-identified concerns. Through in-person engagement and a text-message platform, El Tímpano practices civic-focused reporting shaped by ongoing dialogue and powered by the trust and participation of thousands of Bay Area community members.

  • La Opinión was founded in 1926 in Los Angeles to serve the growing Hispanic community. It provides daily news and information in Spanish. The newspaper’s core coverage focuses on local and immigration issues. Its digital platforms also cover national and international topics relevant to U.S. Hispanics. La Opinión reaches more than 20 million readers worldwide each month. It is the most-read Spanish-language print newspaper in the United States.

  • El Tecolote is a bilingual community newspaper serving San Francisco’s Latinx community from the heart of the Mission District. Founded in 1970, it is California’s longest-running bilingual newspaper. Through print, digital, social, and messaging platforms, El Tecolote reports on local news, arts, culture, and politics while amplifying community voices. Rooted in grassroots journalism, its diverse team believes community media strengthens marginalized communities and trains future journalists.

  • The Nevada Independent is a statewide, reader-supported, digital-only nonprofit newsroom covering Nevada’s most pressing issues. Its journalism delivers timely, in-depth reporting that fosters informed public dialogue, civic engagement, and accountability. Committed to transparency, it publicly discloses all donors and members and operates with full editorial independence, ensuring contributors have no influence over its content.

  • The Ally builds healthy, informed communities through fact-based journalism focused on civic engagement, climate issues, and cultural reporting from underserved communities. Its collaborative approach prioritizes free access to high-quality journalism and multimedia content. Serving communities across the Sierra Nevada, The Ally empowers residents to participate in the democratic process and strengthens the role of local journalism in community life.

  • ASpanish-language community newspaper serving Northern Nevada’s Hispanic and Latino population. Founded around 2010 by community journalists after the closure of a previous Spanish-language paper, it addresses the need for reliable, culturally relevant news. The publication focuses on local reporting, community issues, and cultural updates, with a mission rooted in professional journalism and public service, keeping readers informed about issues that impact their daily lives.

  • Lazer Media is a certified minority-owned company operating 47 radio stations in 20 fast-growing Hispanic markets across California and Nevada. Its multi-market platform delivers culturally relevant, locally tailored programming with consistent quality. Featuring five custom formats spanning today’s top Latin artists and classic superstars, Lazer Media has served communities for over 30 years through broadcasting, charitable support, disaster relief, and local cultural events.

  • Somos Tucson is a Spanish-language news outlet founded by Liliana López Ruelas, a binational and bicultural border journalist (long live Agua Prieta!), in partnership with the Latino community of Tucson and in collaboration with other local community journalists. Somos Tucson was launched in the summer of 2025 with the impetus of the Master's program in Bilingual Journalism at the University of Arizona and initial financial support from the Local News Initiative of Southern Arizona , a program of the Community Foundation for Southern Arizona created to help strengthen local journalism in the region.

  • "Susan Alejandra Barnett is the Deputy Editor and Co-founder of Tucson Spotlight and its Spanish vertical El Foco de Tucson. The digital newsroom’s mission is to provide Southern Arizona with robust, community-based journalism emphasizing solutions, local governments, education, sustainability, social services and politics, and issues through the lens of the Hispanic community. A recent graduate from the Bilingual Journalism Masters Program at the University of Arizona, her research touches on Tucson’s evolving Spanish media landscape, from the first Spanish newspaper to today. She previously worked at La Estrella de Tucsón, where she was laid off in 2023 along with two other Latinas, marking the closure of the only Spanish-language newspaper in Tucson.

  • Prensa Arizona is a Spanish-language media outlet and weekly newspaper based in Phoenix, Arizona, primarily serving the Hispanic and Latino communities across the state. It focuses on reporting local, regional, national, and international news relevant to its readership, including topics such as community events, immigration, health, sports, entertainment, opinion pieces, and socio-economic developments affecting Hispanic audiences.

  • Latine-focused multimedia organization that began as a small publication founded by the late civil rights leader Cesar Chavez to organize support for farm worker rights. Guided by our evolution as a media outlet, we believe in the power of the ripple effect, that even small actions can inspire meaningful and far-reaching change, and in Cesar’s conviction that ordinary people can do extraordinary things. Rooted in the values of representation and inclusion, we are committed to ensuring communities shape their own narratives while celebrating and elevating the culture, history, and diversity of the people we serve.

  • Yvette Borja is the Laura E. Gómez Teaching Fellow on Latinx People and the Law at UCLA School of Law, where her work and teaching focus on movement lawyering, abolition, and immigration law. She previously served as a movement lawyer with the National Day Laborer Organizing Network, leading the National TPS Alliance’s legal strategy in its campaign for permanent residency for Temporary Protected Status holders. Borja earned her B.A. with distinction from Yale University and her J.D. from Stanford Law School, where she was an editor of the Stanford Law Civil Rights and Civil Liberties Journal and received the John Hart Ely Prize. Her writing has appeared in outlets including Balls and Strikes and the Huffington Post, with forthcoming scholarship in the NYU Journal of International Law and Politics. She is also the host and producer of the Radio Cachimbona podcast, an audio archive of migrant resistance and state repression that reaches thousands of listeners and has built a strong national following.

partner associations & institutions

  • The Arizona Latino Media Association (ALMA) is a 501(c)(3) volunteer organization founded in 1997 with a mission to strengthen the media industry through diversity initiatives that deepen the scope, coverage, and understanding of the Latino community. We are dedicated to ensuring fair and balanced reporting on issues that matter most to Latinos in Arizona.
    Our board members are passionate advocates for accurate representation in media. They bring unique expertise and a shared commitment to creating a more inclusive and informed media landscape.



    In 2015, ALMA proudly became the Phoenix chapter of the National Association of Hispanic Journalists (NAHJ). As an official NAHJ chapter, we continue to adapt to the changing media environment while welcoming and supporting the next generation of media professionals with great excitement.

  • is a Spanish-language media outlet and weekly newspaper based in Phoenix, Arizona, primarily serving the Hispanic and Latino communities across the state. It focuses on reporting local, regional, national, and international news relevant to its readership, including topics such as community events, immigration, health, sports, entertainment, opinion pieces, and socio-economic developments affecting Hispanic audiences.

  • Meruelo Media is headquartered in Southern California and is the only certified minority-owned media group in Los Angeles. Meruelo Media radio and TV stations produce compelling content on-air and online through YouTube partnerships, social media, digital banners, and more for our diverse and ever-changing community. Meruelo believes in engaging Southern California communities with events, charity, fundraising, influencer endorsements and experiential marketing.

  • Entravision is a media and advertising technology company founded in 1996 by the late Mr. Walter Ulloa, a visionary in Spanish language broadcasting, with a mission of connecting brands and delivering informative news to the growing Latino market. Their broadcast properties include the largest television affiliate group of the Univision and UniMás television networks and one of the largest groups of primarily Spanish-language radio stations in the United States, providing customers with substantial access and engagement opportunities in the top U.S. Hispanic markets. Smadex, a programmatic ad purchasing platform, enables their customers (primarily mobile app developers), to purchase advertising electronically and manage data-driven advertising campaigns.

  • As a leader in Spanish-language radio, SBS drives Hispanic entertainment in the U.S. It delivers proprietary content across radio, TV, internet, and wireless platforms, adapting to evolving technology and media trends. Focused on creating unique, high-quality entertainment for Hispanic audiences, SBS thrives with platforms like LaMusica.com and Mega TV. By distributing content across multiple platforms, SBS maximizes revenue, expands its brands, and maintains its leadership in the U.S. Hispanic market, ensuring innovation and dominance now and in the future.

  • Telemundo is an American Spanish-language terrestrial television network first founded in 1984. Its programs and original content are aimed at Latin American audiences in the United States and worldwide, consisting of telenovelas, sports, reality television, news programming and films—either imported or Spanish-dubbed. 

  • TelevisaUnivision, the world’s leading Spanish-language media company, produces top original content in Spanish, spanning news, sports, and entertainment. Its multiplatform portfolio includes market-leading broadcast networks, cable networks, ViX, the largest Spanish-language streaming platform globally, Uforia, the largest Spanish-language audio platform in the U.S., Videocine, the leading Mexican movie studio, and more. Through its diverse offerings, TelevisaUnivision solidifies its position as a dominant force in Spanish-language media across multiple platforms.

  • Estrella MediaCo is an award-winning Spanish-language multiplatform media company serving the vital U.S. Hispanic audience on video, audio, and digital platforms. Estrella MediaCo’s national broadcast network EstrellaTV offers a unique aggregation of Spanish-language programming, including originals, topical entertainment, reality, news, and comedy. Estrella MediaCo is also a leader in Spanish-language audio, including the nationally- syndicated Don Cheto Al Aire morning radio show.

TV, Radio, & Broadcasters

Philanthopic Partners