El Trece, stylized as eltrece, is an Argentine free-to-air television network operating as the flagship channel of Arte Radiotelevisivo Argentino S.A. (Artear), a subsidiary of Grupo Clarín.[1][2] Launched on October 1, 1960, as Canal 13, it was one of the earliest private television stations in Argentina, initially managed by Rio de la Plata Televisión S.A. under Cuban-born executive Goar Mestre.[1][3]The network was nationalized in 1975 during Isabel Perón's presidency and later privatized in 1989 under Carlos Menem's administration, with Artear acquiring control and expanding its programming production.[1] In 2008, it rebranded to emphasize its longstanding nickname "El Trece," shifting from the iconic sun logo while maintaining a focus on news, entertainment, and telenovelas that have shaped Argentine broadcasting.[3] El Trece's news division, including the program Telenoche, has garnered international recognition, receiving two International Emmy nominations in 2006 as the first Latin American news program to achieve such honors.[2] Owned by Grupo Clarín, whose major shareholder Héctor Magnetto has influenced its editorial stance amid historical tensions with Peronist governments over media regulation, the channel remains a leading source for daily information in Argentine households.[1][2]
History
Foundation and Early Operations (1960–1974)
Canal 13 initiated regular broadcasts on October 1, 1960, at 8:30 p.m., becoming the third private television station in Buenos Aires after state-run Canal 7 and private Canal 9.[4] The concession for channel 13 (LS85 TV) had been awarded via a 1958 decree under General Pedro Eugenio Aramburu's de facto government to Río de la Plata S.A., a decision later criticized for procedural irregularities.[5] Cuban entrepreneur Goar Mestre, exiled after Fidel Castro's 1959 revolution and experienced in Cuban broadcasting via CMQ network, assumed directorship and shaped the station's early vision as a producer through Proartel.[6][7] The debut transmission opened with announcer Antonio Carrizo's welcome, followed by Mestre's address emphasizing television's irreversible societal impact, and included inaugural programming from the Edificio Alas studios.[8]Under Mestre's leadership, early operations focused on middle-class appeal through diverse, locally produced content in black-and-white format, prioritizing entertainment, education, and news to build viewership amid limited household TV penetration.[9] Key initial programs included the culinary show Buenas Tardes, Mucho Gusto hosted by Doña Petrona C. de Gandulfo, which aired recipes and homemaking tips to large audiences, and variety formats like El Show Casino Phillips.[10] News coverage debuted with Noticiero 13, establishing journalistic routines, while youth-oriented hits such as El Club del Clan and Viando a Biondi introduced music and comedy, fostering stars like Palito Ortega.[11] These efforts, produced in-house, helped Canal 13 achieve rapid audience growth, competing effectively with rivals by 1961.[12]From the mid-1960s to 1974, the channel expanded programming depth, incorporating serialized dramas, game shows, and international adaptations while maintaining Mestre's emphasis on quality production values and advertiser partnerships.[6] By its tenth anniversary in 1970, Mestre's speech underscored milestones like sustained ratings leadership and cultural influence, reflecting operational stability under private control.[13] Proartel oversaw daily operations, including technical upgrades and content scheduling, until the concession expired amid political shifts, leading to nationalization.[7] This period solidified Canal 13's reputation for innovation, with no major disruptions until 1974.[14]
Nationalization Under Peronist Rule (1974–1989)
In 1973, the licenses for Buenos Aires' private television channels 9, 11, and 13, including Canal 13 (operated by Proartel S.A.), expired without renewal, prompting government intervention under President Juan Domingo Perón's third term.[15] On October 8, 1973, Decree Nº 1761 declared the caducity of these licenses, citing national interest in media control, and the Comité Federal de Radiodifusión (COMFER) appointed interventors to oversee operations.[15] Following Perón's death on July 1, 1974, and under President Isabel Perón's administration, Decree Nº 340 on July 31, 1974, formalized the expropriation of the channels' assets, equipment, and associated production companies, effectively nationalizing them effective August 1, 1974.[16][15] The move preserved a commercial advertising model but shifted ownership and editorial direction to state oversight, aiming to align broadcasting with Peronist priorities amid political instability.[15]The expropriation of Canal 13 specifically targeted its facilities in Buenos Aires and Proartel, with the state assuming full management while compensating original owners through negotiated purchases; formal acquisition for Canal 13 was completed in 1978 for approximately 100 million pesos (adjusted for inflation and assets).[15] Programming during the brief Peronist phase post-nationalization emphasized nationalistic content, including telenovelas and public service announcements, but faced disruptions from escalating violence between Peronist factions.[16] State control curtailed independent journalism, with COMFER directives limiting criticism of the government; audience ratings for Canal 13, previously a leader in entertainment, stabilized but reflected reduced innovation under bureaucratic oversight.[15]The March 24, 1976, military coup interrupted Peronist governance, ushering in the National Reorganization Process dictatorship (1976–1983), during which the junta divided nationalized channels among the armed forces: Canal 13 fell under Navy administration, Canal 11 under the Air Force, Canal 9 under the Army, and state Channel 7 under the presidency.[17][18] This allocation, formalized by August 22, 1976, integrated military personnel into management, enforcing strict censorship via prior restraint on scripts and exclusion of "subversive" themes.[17] Content shifted toward propaganda supporting the regime's anti-communist narrative, with increased airtime for military events, economic recovery reports, and sanitized entertainment; news broadcasts avoided human rights abuses, focusing instead on institutional stability.[19] Canal 13's output included popular programs like telenovelas (Los sobrevivientes, 1979) but under naval vetoes that dismissed dissenting staff, resulting in self-censorship and a reported 20–30% drop in creative programming diversity compared to pre-1974 levels.[20]With democracy's return on December 10, 1983, under President Raúl Alfonsín, Canal 13 remained state-owned, managed via COMFER with gradual easing of military-era restrictions.[21] Investigative content reemerged, exemplified by the 1984 broadcast of Nunca Más, a documentary on dictatorship disappearances based on the National Commission on the Disappearance of Persons report, drawing over 5 million viewers and marking a pivot toward accountability-focused journalism.[22] However, chronic underfunding—budgets averaged 50% below inflation-adjusted pre-nationalization levels—led to technical degradation, with equipment failures affecting 15–20% of transmissions annually by 1987.[16] Ratings fluctuated, peaking during World Cup coverage (1986) but lagging private-era highs due to competition from emerging cable and state rivals. State control persisted until 1989, when privatization under President Carlos Menem's Peronist government returned Canal 13 to private hands via auction to Arte Radiotelevisivo Argentino S.A. (ARTEAR).[21] This era of nationalization, spanning bureaucratic Peronist intervention to military authoritarianism and transitional democracy, transformed Canal 13 from a commercial innovator into a tool of stateideology, constraining its audience reach and editorial independence.[15]
Privatization and Market Revival (1989–1999)
In 1989, amid President Carlos Menem's neoliberal economic reforms outlined in the State Reform Law (Ley 23.696), the Argentine government privatized state-owned television assets, including Canal 13 (LS 85 TV), which had operated under public administration since its nationalization in 1974.[21] The process for Channels 11 and 13 involved a two-stage public tender: an evaluation of bidders' technical and financial credentials followed by a sealed price auction to determine the highest offer.[23] Arte Radiotelevisivo Argentino S.A. (Artear), formed earlier that year by Grupo Clarín's publishing arm Editorial Gráfica Editora Argentina (AGEA), won the license for Canal 13 in December 1989 after submitting the winning bid.[24]Private operations commenced in March 1990, ending direct state control and ushering in a commercial model focused on audience-driven content and advertising revenue.[25] Artear invested in studio upgrades, talent acquisition, and production capabilities, transitioning from bureaucratic state programming to a mix of news bulletins, telenovelas, and variety shows tailored to viewer preferences. This shift aligned with broader deregulation that dismantled monopolistic state broadcasting, fostering competition with the simultaneously privatized Canal 11 (later Telefe) and spurring innovation in format and scheduling.[26]The privatization catalyzed a market revival for Canal 13, as economic stabilization under the 1991 convertibility plan boosted advertising budgets and consumer spending, expanding the television sector's reach. By the mid-1990s, the channel had reclaimed a leading position in audience shares through hits like satirical political commentary and adventure documentaries, capitalizing on the absence of ideological constraints to prioritize profitability over public service mandates.[27] This era saw Argentine open television evolve into a commercially viable industry, with Canal 13's output reflecting heightened production values and export potential for fiction formats, though it also concentrated ownership in fewer hands.[28]
Expansion and Peak Ratings in the 2000s
In the early 2000s, El Trece underwent a rebranding to "Canal Trece" in 2000, followed by a significant image renewal in 2002 that introduced modern graphics and programming strategies aimed at competing more aggressively with Telefe. This period marked continued national expansion through its network of owned stations and affiliates, ensuring broad coverage across Argentina via over-the-air and cable distribution.[24]
Programming diversification included successful telenovelas and specials that drove audience growth; for instance, in 2004, Floricienta and Padre Coraje significantly boosted ratings, with the former becoming a cultural phenomenon appealing to youth demographics.[29] In 2005, the special La noche del 10 featuring Diego Maradona drew massive viewership, enhancing prime-time appeal.[29]
Peak ratings were achieved through hits like Sos mi vida in 2006, which averaged 26.9 rating points, and sustained success with Mujeres de nadie and Patito Feo, enabling El Trece to claim top spot in prime-time for five months that year and win the monthly average rating in July 2007 after four years trailing Telefe.[30][29][31] By 2008, expansion extended internationally with the launch of El Trece Internacional, available in over 20 countries via cable and satellite, broadening its global footprint.[29] Despite often holding second place overall behind Telefe, these achievements highlighted El Trece's resilience and strategic adaptations amid economic challenges like the 2001 crisis.[31]
Challenges and Adaptation in the 2010s
In the early 2010s, El Trece faced significant regulatory challenges stemming from the Ley de Servicios de Comunicación Audiovisual (Law 26.522), enacted in 2009 and fully implemented from September 2010, which sought to curb media concentration by limiting licenses and ownership structures, directly targeting Grupo Clarín's portfolio including Canal 13.[32] Clarín contested the law in courts, securing injunctions that delayed divestitures until a 2013 Supreme Court ruling partially upheld the regulations, forcing partial compliance but preserving core assets like El Trece through restructuring; this prolonged legal uncertainty contributed to operational strains and heightened political scrutiny amid tensions with the Fernández de Kirchner administration, which accused Clarín outlets of opposition bias.Audience metrics reflected a post-peak erosion, with El Trece securing annual leadership in 2010 (averaging 10.1 rating points) and briefly in 2011 driven by hits like Showmatch, but ceding dominance to Telefe thereafter due to intensified competition and programming misfires, such as the 2010 loss of exclusive football broadcasting rights from Torneos y Competencias, which halved related viewership.[33][34] Open television's advertising share nationwide declined from 48.2% in 2010 to 40.6% by 2014 amid economic volatility and fragmentation from cable and early streaming services, exacerbating revenue pressures for El Trece.[35]To adapt, El Trece accelerated digital integration, launching eltrecetv.com in the early 2010s to stream episodes, news clips, and archived content, aligning with broader Argentine open TV shifts toward online platforms for audience retention and ancillary revenue via ads and VOD.[36] Programming pivoted toward cost-effective formats like reality competitions and strengthened news output (Telenoche consistently ranked top in bulletins), while experimenting with co-productions to counter fiction's rating slump since 2013; these efforts mitigated some losses, maintaining second-place national standing despite Telefe's edge.[37]
Recent Developments and Resilience (2020–Present)
In the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, El Trece adapted its operations by emphasizing remote production techniques and expanding news coverage on health and economic impacts, sustaining viewership amid nationwide lockdowns that boosted traditional television reliance in Argentina due to limited broadband access.[38] The channel's affiliation with Grupo Clarín provided financial stability, enabling investments in sanitary protocols and virtual sets, which helped mitigate disruptions seen across the industry.[39]By 2023, El Trece recorded an average daily rating of 5.6 points, securing its position as the second-most-watched free-to-air channel behind Telefe, reflecting resilience in a market shifting toward digital platforms yet still dominated by linear TV for mass audiences.[40] This performance persisted despite Argentina's economic volatility, including hyperinflation exceeding 200% annually, as the channel leveraged cost-effective local productions and advertiser support from Clarín's ecosystem. Daily ratings in late 2024 showed El Trece averaging around 3.9 points on weekends, trailing Telefe's 6.7 but outperforming América TV's 2.0, underscoring competitive viability.[41]Entering 2025, under programming director Adrián Suar, El Trece implemented grid overhauls to counter rating declines, canceling underperforming shows such as Mujeres Argentinas and the afternoon edition of Los 8 Escalones de los 2 Millones in October due to insufficient audience draw.[42][43] In response, the channel recruited high-profile talents like Moria Casán for a new cycle announced on October 25, alongside extending airtime for established formats to recapture prime-time viewers.[44] These maneuvers, including weekend renewals and figure rotations like Pampita and María Belén Ludueña, aimed to narrow the gap with Telefe, demonstrating adaptive strategies amid streaming encroachment and economic pressures.[45][46]
Ownership and Corporate Structure
Grupo Clarín Affiliation and Control
El Trece, formerly known as Canal 13, is operated by Arte Radiotelevisivo Argentino Sociedad Anónima (Artear S.A.), a subsidiary fully controlled by Grupo Clarín, Argentina's dominant media conglomerate.[1][47] Artear holds the broadcasting license for the channel in Buenos Aires and oversees its national distribution through owned and affiliated stations.[48] This structure integrates El Trece into Clarín's broader portfolio, which includes newspapers, radio, and cable television, enabling coordinated content production and advertising synergies.Grupo Clarín acquired Canal 13 in 1990 after legislative changes repealed prior bans on newspapers owning broadcast media, allowing Clarín to purchase the station from previous holders.[48] Prior to this, the channel had been under state control during the 1970s and privatized in 1989, but Clarín's entry marked its alignment with private commercial interests.[49] Control is exercised through Artear's board and management, with key executives like Héctor Magnetto, a long-time Clarín shareholder and former CEO, influencing strategic decisions as part of the group's leadership.[1][50]Under this affiliation, Grupo Clarín maintains editorial and operational autonomy for El Trece while leveraging the group's resources for production infrastructure and audience reach, contributing to the channel's position as a leading free-to-air network.[51] Regulatory scrutiny has occasionally targeted Clarín's dominance, including antitrust concerns over cross-ownership, but Artear retains direct operational control without mandated divestitures affecting El Trece as of 2025.[27]
Key Management Figures and Strategic Decisions
Adrián Suar has served as gerente de programación for El Trece since 1994, playing a pivotal role in shaping the channel's content strategy through investments in original fiction and high-profile talent acquisitions. Under his leadership, the channel prioritized telenovelas and series produced via his company Pol-ka Producciones, which contributed to peak viewership in the 2000s by adapting international formats to local audiences and emphasizing family-oriented narratives.[52][53]Suar's strategic decisions have included navigating competitive pressures from rivals like Telefe, such as the 2008 extension of Marcelo Tinelli's contract to bolster prime-time ratings amid declining traditional TV audiences. In response to a ratings slump in early 2025, Suar implemented programming overhauls, including format refreshes and increased focus on reality shows, which he credited for subsequent recovery after a self-described "mala racha."[54][55][56]Earlier, Hugo Di Guglielmo directed programming from 1990 to 2001, steering post-privatization revival by introducing innovative scheduling that emphasized imported U.S. content alongside local productions, achieving dominant market shares during Argentina's economic recovery period.[53]At the corporate level within Artear S.A., Ricardo Ravanelli oversees the news division as director del área de noticias, guiding editorial strategies that prioritize investigative reporting and live coverage to maintain El Trece's position as a key information source. Eduardo Bayo, gerente del área de tecnología y operaciones, has driven infrastructure upgrades, including digital transmission transitions compliant with Argentina's 2019 TV digitalization mandate. These operational decisions support broader Grupo Clarín directives for cost efficiency and multi-platform distribution amid declining ad revenues.[57][58]
Programming and Content Strategy
News and Journalistic Output
El Trece's journalistic output centers on daily newscasts emphasizing national and international coverage, live reporting, and investigative segments, with Telenoche as its cornerstone program since the 1960s. Airing weekdays at 8:00 PM, Telenoche delivers comprehensive bulletins on politics, economy, society, and breaking events, often incorporating on-site correspondents and expert analysis, and has maintained a format prioritizing factual reporting over sensationalism.[59][60]Recognized for its longevity and viewership leadership, Telenoche was among the first Argentine programs to establish a consistent prime-time news slot, initially as the sole 8:00 PM bulletin when competitors focused on entertainment, fostering a tradition of timely, in-depth journalism that evolved from black-and-white broadcasts to digital integration by the 2010s. The program has covered pivotal events including economic crises, elections, and social upheavals, with production emphasizing verification through multiple sources and on-the-ground verification.[61][60]Complementing Telenoche are midday and morning newscasts such as Mediodía Noticias at 1:00 PM, which focuses on updates to current affairs with shorter segments on regional developments, and Arriba Argentinos at 7:00 AM, blending news with light analysis for early audiences. Noticiero Trece provides ongoing live updates and specialized sections on topics like public health and security, accessible via the channel's digital platforms for extended reach. These programs collectively air over six hours of news content daily, prioritizing empirical reporting amid Argentina's polarized media landscape.[59][62]Grupo Clarín, the channel's parent company, positions El Trece's news as the most credible in Argentine television, citing audiencetrust metrics and consistent ratings dominance in surveys of household preferences for information sources. This reputation stems from a commitment to undiluted sourcing and avoidance of state-aligned narratives, though external analyses note its alignment with market-liberal perspectives in coverage of government policies. Investigative output, including exposés on corruption and policy failures, has occasionally drawn regulatory scrutiny but reinforced its role as a counterweight to official media.[2][21]
Entertainment, Fiction, and Variety Shows
El Trece has historically prioritized domestically produced fiction, including telenovelas and serialized dramas, often in collaboration with Pol-ka Producciones, which debuted on the channel with Poliladron in 1995 and garnered strong viewership for its police procedural format.[63] Subsequent Pol-ka series like Gasoleros (premiered 1998, 129 episodes) and Campeones de la vida (premiered 1999, 267 episodes) achieved commercial success, with the former focusing on working-class family struggles and the latter on Paralympic athletes, both contributing to peak audience shares in the late 1990s.[64][65]Into the 2000s, fiction output included family-oriented comedies such as Los Roldán (2004–2005, over 200 episodes), which blended humor with social commentary on suburban life, and Son de Fierro (2007–2008), a dramedy that averaged competitive ratings amid economic recovery themes.[64] More recent efforts like Graduados (2012) modernized reunion tropes with intergenerational conflicts, drawing praise for ensemble casting and sustaining above-average viewership.[65] By the 2010s, however, original fiction declined due to rising production costs and streaming competition, prompting adaptations of international formats and a pivot toward limited series, with 2024 announcements for national streaming-exclusive titles to revive output.[66][67]Variety programming on El Trece emphasizes live entertainment, humor, and audience participation, with Showmatch—premiered April 4, 2005, hosted by Marcelo Tinelli—serving as its flagship since Tinelli's shift from rival networks.[68] The show evolved from sketch comedy to include reality competitions like Bailando por un Sueño (introduced 2006), achieving debut ratings of 31.5 points in 2006 and maintaining seasonal highs through celebrity-driven formats.[69] Earlier variety efforts, such as those produced by the Sofovich brothers in the 1970s–1980s, laid groundwork with satirical sketches, but Showmatch dominated the genre, often exceeding 20-point averages and influencing cultural trends in dance and celebrity exposure.[70][68] Recent seasons have adapted to digital integration, incorporating social media voting to sustain relevance amid fragmented viewership.[71]
Format Adaptations and Original Productions
El Trece has extensively adapted international television formats, especially reality competitions, to bolster its entertainment lineup and compete in ratings. Bailando por un Sueño, launched on April 17, 2006, within the Showmatch program hosted by Marcelo Tinelli, adapts the British Strictly Come Dancing and U.S. Dancing with the Stars formats by pairing celebrities with professional dancers for weekly performances judged on technique and creativity.[72] The competition, spanning multiple seasons through 2023 with periodic revivals, emphasized charitable "dreams" for contestants, driving peak viewership and cultural impact in Argentina. Similarly, Soñando por Bailar (2011), hosted by Santiago del Moro, mirrored So You Think You Can Dance by scouting amateur dancers for professional training and elimination rounds, airing weekly challenges to identify emerging talent.[73] Other adaptations include Soñando por Cantar, a vocal talent search akin to Pop Idol, and Cuestión de Peso, a weight-loss challenge resembling The Biggest Loser, both broadcast in the early 2010s to target family demographics. In 2024, El Trece acquired rights for The Floor, the first Latin American version of the Dutch quiz format from Talpa, where contestants defend knowledge "floors" in a grid-based arena, set for primetime rollout.[74]Complementing these, El Trece has produced original content emphasizing local narratives in fiction and variety. Scripted originals include telenovelas like Son de Fierro (2007–2008), a family drama centered on steelworkers' lives amid economic hardship, developed with Pol-ka Producciones to reflect Argentine social realities. The channel's variety programming features homegrown segments within Showmatch, such as Gran Cuñado (2007–2012), an original satirical puppet impersonation of politicians that garnered acclaim for political commentary despite controversies. Recent shifts prioritize co-productions and acquired series, but historical originals underscore El Trece's role in fostering Argentine storytelling, often blending humor, drama, and cultural critique without direct foreign templates.[75]
Reception, Ratings, and Impact
Market Leadership and Audience Metrics
El Trece ranks as the second-leading free-to-air television channel in Argentina, trailing Telefe but maintaining a competitive position in audience share and advertising revenue among linear broadcasters. In 2024, Kantar IBOPE Media measurements indicated El Trece achieved an average daily rating of 3.7 points, significantly behind Telefe's 7.6 points, reflecting a broader industry trend of fragmentation due to streaming services.[76] This positioned El Trece ahead of other open channels like América TV and Canal 9, with occasional wins in specific time slots or programs, such as news segments or entertainment specials that occasionally outperformed rivals.[77]Audience share metrics underscore El Trece's resilience, with prime time figures averaging 31.3% and total broadcast time around 30.7% in recent annual data from Grupo Clarín, indicating that nearly one-third of TV viewers tuned to the channel during active periods.[78] Earlier years showed slightly higher ratings, such as a 5.6-point average in 2023, but overall linear TV ratings have declined amid competition from platforms like Netflix, which captured growing demand shares.[40] El Trece's performance in audience share has remained stable relative to peers, supporting its status as a key player in advertising markets, where it competes directly with Telefe for the bulk of free-to-air ad spend.[79]
Awards, Accolades, and Cultural Influence
El Trece has received multiple Martín Fierro Awards, the leading honors for Argentine television excellence conferred by the Asociación de Periodistas de la Televisión y Radiofonía Argentinas (APTRA). In the 2025 ceremony, its flagship newscast Telenoche won for Best Nightly Newscast, with presenters Nelson Castro and Dominique Metzger accepting on behalf of the team.[80] The channel's programs have historically competed strongly, contributing to its tally of wins across categories like news, entertainment, and production quality in various editions.[81]The network has also secured the Fund TV Golden Award, recognizing societal contributions through programming, on several occasions: in 2005, 2009, 2010, 2013, and 2015.[82][83][84] In 2015, El Trece dominated with 10 statuettes, earning the top honor for overall impact.[85] Additional recognitions include 14 nominations for the 2025 TAL Awards (Televisión América Latina), highlighting international production standards.[86]El Trece has profoundly shaped Argentine cultural landscapes since its 1960 launch as Canal 13, introducing formats that defined national television eras. Early hits like El Club del Clan (1962–1965) popularized rock and roll, launching stars such as Palito Ortega and Violeta Rivas while fostering youth subcultures amid social change.[11] In the 1990s, satirical programs featuring Tato Bores critiqued politics, blending humor with commentary that influenced public discourse, alongside educational series like La Aventura del Hombre that promoted exploration and knowledge.Later successes, including reality formats like Showmatch (later rebranded), achieved peak ratings exceeding 40 points, embedding dance competitions and celebrity culture into everyday viewing habits and spawning imitators across Latin America.[87]Telenoche, airing since 1966, has served as a bedrock for news consumption, with events coverage drawing millions and reinforcing its role in national identity formation, though subject to debates on editorial stance. The channel's output has launched careers, exported formats, and mirrored societal shifts, maintaining influence despite streaming competition.
Criticisms of Programming Quality and Relevance
El Trece has faced persistent criticism for the perceived decline in its programming quality, manifested through consistently low ratings and a shift away from original national content. In 2023, channel programming director Adrián Suar acknowledged responsibility for poor performance, stating that his decision to air two foreign telenovelas resulted in failure, as they underperformed compared to competitors' offerings.[88] This misstep highlighted broader concerns over inadequate curation of imported formats ill-suited to Argentine audiences, contributing to El Trece's loss of prime-time dominance to Telefe, which succeeded with high-quality domestic telenovelas and series.[89]By 2024, the channel eliminated original fiction productions entirely, opting instead for alternatives like foreign acquisitions or repeats, a move decried by industry observers for eroding cultural relevance and viewer engagement in a market already strained by streaming platforms.[90] Critics argued this reflected a lack of investment in innovative national storytelling, exacerbating the national fiction crisis where production hours plummeted, leaving audiences with formulaic content disconnected from contemporary realities.[91] Specific programs, such as the 2023 novelaBuenos Chicos, drew sharp rebukes for insufficient originality and diversity, with commentator Marina Calabró labeling it unconvincing and derivative.[92][93]Relevance critiques intensified in 2025 amid ongoing ratings freefall, with multiple shows canceled due to dismal viewership, including Reacción en Cadena in July and Los 8 Escalones shortly after, signaling structural flaws in format selection and scheduling.[94][95] Internal tensions and on-air scandals further undermined content credibility, as reported in mid-2025 analyses describing the channel's output as terminal in quality amid economic pressures.[96] Detractors, including media executives, pointed to a failure to adapt to digital shifts, resulting in programming that alienates younger demographics and prioritizes short-term cost-cutting over substantive renewal.[97]
Controversies and Political Tensions
Clashes with Peronist Governments
Tensions between El Trece, as part of Grupo Clarín, and Peronist administrations under Néstor and Cristina Fernández de Kirchner intensified from 2008 onward, stemming from the channel's reporting on government policies perceived as oppositional by officials. The rift originated during the 2008 agrarian conflict, where farmers protested export tax hikes imposed by the Kirchners; El Trece provided extensive coverage sympathetic to the protesters, airing reports that highlighted road blockades and economic disruptions, which the government blamed for prolonging the standoff from March to July. Cristina Fernández de Kirchner publicly accused Clarín outlets, including Canal 13, of biased journalism that amounted to "destabilization," marking the start of a broader campaign portraying the group as an elite-aligned adversary.[98][99]A pivotal escalation occurred with the enactment of the Audiovisual Services Law (Ley de Servicios de Comunicación Audiovisual) on October 28, 2009, which sought to dismantle media monopolies by capping licenses at 10 per owner across radio and TV, directly impacting Clarín's holdings including El Trece's broadcast licenses and cross-ownership with cable operator Cablevisión. The government, led by Cristina Fernández de Kirchner, framed the law as democratizing communications, but Clarín contested it as a politically motivated tool to silence critics, filing injunctions that delayed enforcement until a 2013 Supreme Court ruling partially upheld the law while invalidating some articles. In parallel, the administration revoked Clarín's lucrative soccer broadcasting rights in August 2009, reallocating them to the state-run Fútbol para Todos program, depriving the group of an estimated ARS 100 million annually in revenue.[100][101][102]Regulatory pressures mounted through the Federal Authority for Audiovisual Communication Services (AFSCA), which investigated Clarín entities and imposed restrictions; for instance, in March 2010, the government annulled the prior merger of Cablevisión and Multicanal, citing antitrust violations under the new law. A June 2013 federal court decision ruled that the Kirchner administration had discriminated against Channel 13 by allocating official advertising unevenly, favoring pro-government outlets and reducing Clarín's share to about 1% of total state ads by 2012, a tactic critics attributed to economic coercion rather than merit-based distribution. El Trece responded by amplifying investigative reporting on corruption scandals, such as the 2010 Papel Prensa ownership probe initiated by the government, which Clarín dismissed as a smear campaign lacking evidence of irregularities.[103][98][104]Under Alberto Fernández's Peronist government (2019–2023), clashes were less overt but persisted through critical coverage of economic policies and inflation, with El Trece facing indirect pressures via advertising dependencies and regulatory oversight, though without the legislative overhauls of the prior era. These disputes reflected a pattern where Peronist leaders viewed Clarín's media empire, including El Trece, as a structural threat to narrative control, while the group maintained its stance on editorial independence amid declining state favoritism toward allied broadcasters.[104]
Media Law Disputes and Regulatory Pressures
The Audiovisual Communication Services Law (Law 26.522), promulgated on August 28, 2009, by President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner, established caps on media ownership to address concentration, limiting any single entity to no more than ten broadcast licenses nationwide (including three for open television) and prohibiting simultaneous ownership of broadcast and cable services in the same geographic area.[100] This directly targeted Grupo Clarín's holdings, which encompassed ARTE Radiotelevisivo Argentino S.A. (ARTEAR), the licensee for Canal 13 (El Trece), alongside cable operator Cablevisión, multiple radio stations, and print media, forcing potential divestitures to comply with Article 161's desinversion mandates.[100] Clarín obtained a judicial injunction suspending enforcement until December 7, 2012, amid claims that the measure threatened economic viability and was retaliatory against its critical coverage of the government.[105]On October 29, 2013, Argentina's Supreme Court declared the law constitutional in a 4-1 ruling, rejecting Clarín's challenges and requiring adaptation within one year, though it preserved certain injunctions pending administrative review.[100] The Federal Authority for Audiovisual Communication Services (AFSCA), the law's enforcement body, exerted regulatory pressure by initiating forced compliance proceedings against non-adherent licensees, including scrutiny of El Trece's operations as part of ARTEAR's portfolio exceeding the limits.[106] In response, Clarín submitted a voluntary divestment plan on November 4, 2013, relinquishing three FM radio licenses and adjusting cable holdings, which allowed retention of core assets like El Trece's broadcast license while AFSCA approved partial adequations by mid-2015.[106] Opponents of the law, including Clarín executives, contended that AFSCA's politicized application favored government-aligned outlets and stifled independent journalism, whereas Kirchner administration officials maintained it promoted pluralism by curbing monopolistic dominance.[27]Regulatory tensions eased following the December 29, 2015, issuance of Decree of Necessity and Urgency (DNU) 267/2015 by President Mauricio Macri, which dissolved AFSCA, created the National Communications Entity (ENACOM), and repealed ownership caps, multiplicity restrictions, and divestiture requirements, enabling indefinite license prorogations for compliant broadcasters like El Trece without mandatory sales.[107][108] This shift, upheld against challenges, removed immediate threats to ARTEAR's control of Canal 13, whose license had originated from 1989 privatizations and a 2004 ten-year renewal, stabilizing operations amid prior uncertainties.[109] The decree's proponents argued it fostered investment and reduced state overreach, while critics from Peronist sectors decried it as reversing anti-concentration safeguards.[108]
Accusations of Bias and Responses
El Trece, as part of Grupo Clarín, has faced repeated accusations from Peronist officials and aligned media of political bias favoring opposition forces and opposing government narratives, particularly during the Kirchner administrations from 2003 to 2015. Critics, including Cristina Fernández de Kirchner in multiple public addresses, portrayed the channel's news programs, such as Telenoche, as systematically amplifying allegations of corruption and economic mismanagement under Peronist rule—often labeled "corrupción K"—while minimizing coverage of policy achievements like social welfare expansions or infrastructure projects. This selective emphasis was attributed to Clarín's corporate interests clashing with regulatory efforts, such as the 2009 Audiovisual Media Services Law aimed at curbing media concentration, which opponents framed as an attempt to dismantle perceived "hegemonic" outlets like El Trece. Such claims were echoed in state-aligned outlets and official rhetoric, positioning the channel within a broader narrative of mediacollusion against populist governance.[110][111]In response, El Trece and Grupo Clarín have consistently rejected these allegations, asserting that their coverage adheres to journalistic standards by prioritizing verifiable facts, judicial investigations, and public records rather than ideological alignment. The group has compiled timelines documenting over 100 instances of government-orchestrated attacks between 2008 and 2015, including presidential speeches accusing Clarín of "conspiring" against the state, regulatory pressures, and tax agency raids, framing them as retaliatory measures to silence dissent rather than evidence of bias. Executives emphasized that empirical disparities in coverage reflect the prevalence of documented scandals in Peronist-linked entities, as corroborated by court cases and audits, not editorial favoritism toward figures like Mauricio Macri or Javier Milei.[110][112]Accusations have not been unidirectional; during the 2015-2019 Macri presidency, left-leaning critics, including an ex-Canal 13journalist, alleged a pro-government tilt in programming that downplayed Macri-era economic downturns, such as inflation spikes exceeding 50% annually by 2019. However, these claims received less institutional backing compared to Peronist-era critiques, amid polarized media dynamics where state broadcasters like TV Pública exhibited overt pro-government slants, as noted in reports on Argentine press freedom. El Trece countered by highlighting diverse panel discussions and investigative segments critiquing all administrations, maintaining audience trust through ratings leadership in news demographics. Sources advancing bias claims often originate from politically aligned entities with incentives to discredit independent outlets, underscoring causal links between power retention and narrative control in Argentina's media ecosystem.[113][114]
Branding and Technical Evolution
Logos and Visual Identity Changes
In July 2000, Canal 13 introduced an updated logo featuring the channel's numeric identifier integrated with its signature sun motif, which remained in use until November 2008._-_2000.png)On December 1, 2008, a refined version of the logo was launched, incorporating metallic effects and aligning with the channel's rebranding to El Trece, while preserving the core sun design; this iteration persisted until 2016.[115]The most recent major visual identity overhaul occurred on March 21, 2016, when the brand stylized to lowercase "eltrece" and debuted a simplified isotipo of the 12-pointed sun symbol—divided into quadrants of purple, red, light orange, and yellow—for standalone use in graphics and promotions, accompanied by modernized on-air elements to emphasize digital adaptability.[116]These evolutions have retained the sun as a constant emblem, symbolizing continuity amid shifts in typography, color gradients, and packaging to reflect technological and market trends, with interim graphics refreshes in 2009 focusing on motion design without altering the primary logo.[117]
Broadcasting Technology and Digital Shift
El Trece has historically relied on VHF analog broadcasting since its launch on October 1, 1960, transmitting on channel 13 (LS 85 TV) from Buenos Aires with coverage extended via affiliates nationwide. The channel's technological evolution included early experiments with color transmission in 1969, conducted privately by its technical team before official national adoption of PAL-N standard in the 1970s.[118]The shift to digital terrestrial television accelerated following Argentina's 2009 adoption of the ISDB-T standard via presidential decree, enabling multiplexed high-definition signals alongside analog. In April 2011, El Trece, owned by Grupo Clarín, commenced test broadcasts on UHF frequency 33 using ISDB-T, starting with its international feed before integrating local content into the Sistema Argentino de Televisión Digital Terrestre (SATVD-T), coordinated by Osvaldo Nemirovsci.[119] This allowed for enhanced picture quality, widescreen formats, and datacasting capabilities, with plans to replicate across 44 interior stations, including 33 private outlets. El Trece's digital signal is receivable via UHF antennas in covered areas, coexisting with analog until national switchover delays, and is incorporated into the TDA network as a free-to-air channel.[120]Complementing terrestrial digital, El Trece embraced online streaming to counter cord-cutting trends, launching its eltrecetv.com.ar platform for live feeds, full episodes, and VOD since the mid-2010s. In July 2025, it unveiled an expanded streaming initiative under the "el trece prende" banner, effective July 14, featuring refreshed digital programming to boost multi-platform engagement.[121] The channel maintains active YouTube and social media channels for highlights, amassing significant viewership, while integrating with smart TVs and apps for hybrid consumption.[122] This digital pivot reflects broader industry adaptation to IP-based delivery, prioritizing viewer accessibility over legacy infrastructure.