XEW-AM, 'La Voz de la América Latina desde México' (The Voice of Latin America from Mexico), was the most powerful and influential radio station in the Spanish-speaking world during the golden age of Mexican radio. The station's headquarters in the Coyoacán borough of Mexico City is reportedly haunted by several ghosts, including the spirit of Pedro Infante, Mexico's most beloved singer and actor, who died in a plane crash in 1957. Staff working late at the station describe hearing Infante's voice singing in the recording studios, along with the sounds of a full orchestra accompanying him. Other ghostly presences include a female announcer whose voice is heard reading news bulletins in the style of the 1940s and 1950s, and a phantom engineer who is seen adjusting equipment in the control room before vanishing. EVP recordings from the station have allegedly captured radio transmissions that match broadcasts from the station's golden era. The haunting of XEW-AM represents a uniquely Mexican form of cultural ghostliness — the spirits of the golden age of Mexican entertainment, when the country's music, radio dramas, and cultural output dominated the Spanish-speaking world.
