{{short description|Contemporary hit radio station in Mexico City}} {{More citations needed|date=February 2021}} {{Infobox radio station | name = XEOYE-FM | logo = [[File:Oye 89.7.svg|Thumbnail]] | city = [[Mexico City]] | area = [[Greater Mexico City]] | country = MX | branding = Oye 89.7 | frequency = 89.7 [[MHz]] | airdate = August 28, 1957 | language = [[Mexican Spanish|Spanish]] | format = {{hlist|[[Contemporary hit radio]]|[[Latin pop]]|[[reggaeton]]}} | erp = 100 kW{{mexico-inf|FM|access-date=2015-07-04}} | class = [[list of broadcast station classes#FM|C]] | haat = {{convert|484.64|m|ft|sp=us}} | coordinates = {{coord|19|31|54.2|N|99|07|47.7|W}} | sister_stations = [[XHMM-FM]], [[XHSON-FM]], [[XEPH-AM]], [[XEBS-AM]], [[XEOY-AM]] | callsign_meaning = OYE ("Listen" in Spanish; also a modification of previous XEOY callsign) | owner = NRM Comunicaciones | licensee = Radio Proyección, S.A. de C.V. | webcast = {{listenlive|https://playerservices.streamtheworld.com/api/livestream-redirect/XEOYEFM_SC}} | website = {{URL|1=https://oyedigital.mx/|2=oyedigital.mx/}} }} '''XEOYE-FM''' is a radio station in [[Mexico City]]. Located on 89.7 [[FM broadcasting|FM]], XEOYE-FM is a pop-formatted radio station owned by NRM Comunicaciones and branded as Oye 89.7. The transmitter site is located atop [[Cerro del Chiquihuite]].

== History == XEOYE-FM is Mexico City's oldest surviving FM radio station, on air since August 28, 1957. It started its life as XEBS-FM, later switching callsigns with [[XHSON-FM|100.9 FM]] to become XEOY-FM. It started with a classical music format, known as "Estéreomil", that remained on air for 39 years. The station was among the first in Mexico to operate regularly in stereo.

After nearly four decades, on July 29, 1994, XEOY-FM became Morena F.M., an early ranchera and ballad music format. In January 2000, NRM briefly allied with [[MVS Radio]], which resulted in 89.7 FM taking on the FM Globo format when MVS's [[XHEXA-FM|104.9 FM]] became Exa FM; on July 15, 2002, this was ditched to become pop-formatted Oye 89.7. The station's callsign was changed to XEOYE-FM as part of the rebrand.

==References== {{reflist}}

{{Mexico City Radio}}

[[Category:1957 establishments in Mexico]] [[Category:Contemporary hit radio stations in Mexico]] [[Category:Radio stations established in 1957]] [[Category:Radio stations in Mexico City]]