Wednesday, February 29, 2012
Fed: Turnbull not only politician to recieve Briger funds
AAP General News (Australia)
02-08-2009
Fed: Turnbull not only politician to recieve Briger funds
Federal Opposition Leader MALCOLM TURNBULL says he's not the only politician to receive
campaign funds from a questionable American billionaire.
The Sun-Herald says Mr TURNBULL received 76 thousand dollars from Fortress Investment
Group director PETER BRIGER to help fund his campaign for the Sydney seat of Wentworth.
Mr TURNBULL had shares in the company …
Verizon Upgrades Media Guide for FiOS TV
Wireless News
06-22-2011
Verizon Upgrades Media Guide for FiOS TV
Type: News
Verizon announced it is continuing to roll out the ninth major upgrade of its Interactive Media Guide, the operating system for FiOS TV.
According to a release, introduced in 2007, the FiOS TV IMG was the first broadband platform to pull together content from broadcast TV, the Internet and users' own personal media into one media- management system. It's since evolved into an in-depth, interactive TV experience, with applications for search, social networking, Internet video, personal media streaming, high-definition music, remote DVR controls, account management and billing functions, multi- screen/mobile viewing and much more. The latest upgrade will be made available to FiOS TV subscribers throughout the summer.
"At its inception, FiOS TV was designed to deliver a radically different home-entertainment experience," said Eric Bruno, vice president product management for Verizon's consumer and business services. "The vast variety of programming and capabilities we offered from the start of FiOS TV required an operating system that could organize and simplify content for customers. Every year we've added more advanced capabilities that have changed TV viewing from a one-way passive experience into an interactive and social journey of search, discovery, personalization and community."
Verizon recently used customer feedback gained from its product development labs, field trials and social media forums to create more than 25 of its latest upgrades to its FiOS TV IMG, including greater personalization, easier navigation, deeper search, bigger storage options and optimization for new 3D technology, the Company said.
"As customers explore the richness of their FiOS TV service, they'll find an easy-to-manage, highly interactive, technologically advanced offering unlike anything else available in the marketplace today, delivered over the ultimate, advanced all-fiber-optic network," said Bruno. "We're erasing technology boundaries to free customers to benefit from everything they're looking for in entertainment - at home and on the go."
((Comments on this story may be sent to newsdesk@closeupmedia.com))
Copyright 2011 Close-Up Media, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
n/a
FED:Petrol to drop by up to 2 cents this week
AAP General News (Australia)
12-05-2011
FED:Petrol to drop by up to 2 cents this week
By Ed Logue
CANBERRA, Dec 5 AAP - Motorists should expect petrol prices to drop by up to 2 cents
a litre this week despite retailers withholding some of the recent falls in fuel costs,
an economist says.
The average Australian price of unleaded petrol fell 0.8 of a cent to 140.7 cents a
litre in the week ending December 4, according to data from the Australian Institute of
Petroleum.
The national average metropolitan price fell 1 cent to 138.9 cents a litre, while the
regional average price fell 0.4 of a cent to 144.4 cents a litre.
Commsec chief economist Craig James said the petrol price was falling "ever so slowly"
and should continue to do so this week.
"CommSec expects another 1 cent to 2 cents fall in pump prices in the coming week,"
Mr James said in a statement on Monday.
"Motorists need to carefully watch the new 10-day discounting cycle - the cheap days
for filling up end in the next day or so."
The wholesale (terminal gate) price rose 0.2 of a cent to 129.8 cents a litre last week.
Mr James said the wholesale price had fallen 2.6 cents a litre more than the pump price
over the past seven weeks.
"It would be interesting what the Petrol Commissioner has to say about the lofty margin
between the wholesale and retail petrol price," he said.
"At close to 11 cents a litre, the gross retail margin remains near record levels."
Darwin had the dearest petrol, which remained flat at 151.9 cents a litre. Melbourne
had the cheapest unleaded fuel, down 2 cents to 136.4 cents a litre.
The average petrol price fell in all major cities except Darwin and Hobart, which were
flat, and Adelaide, where unleaded fuel rose 0.7 of a cent to 139.4 cents a litre.
AAP el/tab/
KEYWORD: PETROL
� 2011 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
--Xing to pay special dividend of EUR3.70 per share
Internet Business News
04-01-2011
--Xing to pay special dividend of EUR3.70 per share
INTERNET BUSINESS NEWS-(C)1995-2011 M2 COMMUNICATIONS
1 April 2011 - German professional networking site Xing plans to pay a special dividend of EUR 3.70 on the back of strong earnings for 2010.
That is why the board will propose to its shareholders to approve a capital reduction along with a capital hike of EUR20m. These financial steps will help the company pay the dividend.
Xing has been listed since 2006 and has not distributed dividend so far.
The annual shareholders meeting of Xing will take place on May 26.
((Comments on this story may be sent to info@m2.com))
(Copyright M2 Communications, 2011)
NSW:NRL's Jacin Sinclair found dead in home
AAP General News (Australia)
12-10-2010
NSW:NRL's Jacin Sinclair found dead in home
SYDNEY, Dec 10 AAP - Former National Rugby League player Jacin (Jacin) Sinclair has
been found dead in his house on Thursday.
His body was discovered at the property in the northern harbourside suburb of Woolwich
about 4pm (AEDT) on Thursday when police forced their way inside after being contacted
by a concerned relative.
He is believed to have been dead for several days.
Police would not officially confirm his identity but there is no doubt the body is
that of Mr Sinclair.
Detectives are conducting inquiries and say the death is not considered suspicious.
A post-mortem examination will be conducted to determine the cause and time of death, police say.
Mr Sinclair played 80 first-grade NRL games in the 1990s for Balmain, Souths and the
Sydney Roosters.
AAP bzs/wjf/dep
KEYWORD: SINCLAIR
� 2010 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
FED:New body could lock in three debates
AAP General News (Australia)
08-03-2010
FED:New body could lock in three debates
Greens leader BOB BROWN has challenged Prime Minister JULIA GILLARD to debate him ..
if Opposition Leader TONY ABBOTT refuses to show.
After a lacklustre debate between the leaders of the two major parties on July 25 ..
Ms GILLARD's agreed to debate Mr ABBOTT again on Sunday .. but only on economic issues.
The date clashes with the coalition's campaign launch .. and Mr ABBOTT says he won't
change his schedule now.
Senator BROWN says voters deserved to hear from his party too.
He'll campaign in Darwin today.
AAP RTV gd/rl/jkl/crh
KEYWORD: POLL10 DEBATE GREENS (CANBERRA)
� 2010 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
Vic: Killers more likely to suffer mental disorders, study finds
AAP General News (Australia)
12-21-2009
Vic: Killers more likely to suffer mental disorders, study finds
MELBOURNE, Dec 21 AAP - Four out of five Victorian women killers and one in three of
their male counterparts suffered a mental disorder when they took a life, a study has
found.
The unpublished study of homicide and mental illness is part of a doctoral degree by
Victoria Police Detective Senior Sergeant Debra Bennett and covered 380 men and 55 women
who committed homicides in Victoria from 1997 to 2005, The Age newspaper said.
The most common disorder diagnosed in the study group was schizophrenia, a condition
38 of the 435 killers had, the newspaper said.
Men with schizophrenia were found to be eight times more likely to kill, with women
with the same condition 29 times more likely to kill than non-schizophrenics, the study
found.
The study said the "vast majority" of schizophrenics are not a risk to others but it
found they were more likely than other killers to plan their attack and be motivated by
revenge.
Victoria has fewer psychiatric beds than the national average, with 23 beds per 100,000
people compared with 30.7 per 100,000 nationally, the newspaper said.
AAP jrd/rs
KEYWORD: KILLERS
2009 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
Fed: All the symbolism of the plunge into gloom
AAP General News (Australia)
08-11-2009
Fed: All the symbolism of the plunge into gloom
By Don Woolford
CANBERRA, Aug 11 AAP - Halfway through question time on Tuesday, the main lights failed
and the House of Reps was plunged into gloom for nearly 10 minutes.
It could have symbolised all sorts of things.
The opposition thought it was hilarious, which was fair enough as nothing less could
have halted Kevin Rudd's flow.
At the time, he was eight minutes into a lecture praising his government's actions
to stimulate the economy while warning of tough times ahead. All the usual phrases - not
out of the woods; the road to recovery will have many twists, turns and bumps - had already
come.
So maybe the power failure was a harbinger of tough times ahead.
Rudd, who waited a couple of minutes before carrying on in the half light, had another idea.
The storm and tempest outside was nothing to the storm and tempest in the Liberal ranks, he said.
Which takes us to what the first question time in six weeks was all about - the government's
climate change legislation which will almost certainly be voted down in the Senate on
Thursday.
So maybe the failure presages the bill's defeat; or perhaps it's a sign of what will
happen to the electricity supply when some system to cut carbon emissions is finally in
place.
The opposition spent most of the session wanting to know why the government wouldn't
consider an alternative scheme, proposed by Frontier Economics and unveiled by Opposition
Leader Malcolm Turnbull on Monday.
Turnbull says it's cheaper, greener and smarter.
Yet the opposition hasn't adopted it as policy, which gave Rudd the excuse to blast
his opponents for not knowing what they want. The scheme, he thundered, was the opposition's
eighth different delaying tactic.
This theme led to his most convoluted metaphor - the Liberals "couldn't organise a
unity ticket in a brown paper bag". That's got a very Labor and Queensland sound to it.
As for the Frontier scheme itself, well it was just magic pudding, he said. He liked
the Norman Lindsay allusion so much he used it at least seven times. Once it was "the
magic pudding from central casting".
Later, Peter Garrett, in the course of carefully not saying why the government wouldn't
decouple its bill to set targets for emissions reduction (which the opposition supports)
from its main carbon reduction legislation, elevated the phrase to acronym status.
"We have ETS (emissions trading scheme), they have MPS (magic pudding scheme)," he said.
The great absentee from proceedings was Godwin Grech. There wasn't a mention of the
Treasury official and fake emails which have caused Turnbull such grief.
Rudd has presumably picked up the message that the voters are sick of righteous gloating.
AAP dw/sb/jl/mn
KEYWORD: PARLY VIEW
2009 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
Fed: Most want first home grant boost extended: survey
AAP General News (Australia)
04-01-2009
Fed: Most want first home grant boost extended: survey
CANBERRA, April 1 AAP - Most Australians want the federal government to extend the
deadline on its more generous first home owners grant scheme beyond June, an online survey
shows.
Last October, the government doubled the grant to $14,000 for established homes and
$21,000 for newly built properties as part of its $10.4 billion stimulus package.
The government has said it can't guarantee the May budget will extended the more generous
grants beyond June 30.
An online poll conducted by independent mortgage broker Loan Market Group found 91
per cent of respondents believed the increases should be extended.
Loan Market Group executive director John Kolenda said the survey results backed widespread
calls for an extension due to the positive effect on the residential real estate market.
"The recovery of the real estate market would be jeopardised if the government sticks
to the original plan," Mr Kolenda said.
The survey found 39 per cent of respondents were looking to enter the property market
but not until the second half of the year.
Twenty eight per cent said they had home loan pre-approval but had not found a property,
while 24 per cent said the boosted grants had been good for the property market.
Mr Kolenda dismissed claims the increased grants had inflated property prices and made
thousands of first-time borrowers vulnerable to bankruptcy if they joined growing jobless
queues.
"The grant has provided stability for the residential real estate sector and those
people entering the property market are borrowing under a much stricter lending regime,"
he said.
"There are many consumers and small-medium enterprises finding it more difficult to
get credit now than they otherwise would have historically, indicating that our banks
are well on top of managing borrower risk."
AAP cb/kms/tnf
KEYWORD: HOUSING GRANT
2009 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
Qld: Barack Obama's achievement extraordinary: Rudd
AAP General News (Australia)
08-29-2008
Qld: Barack Obama's achievement extraordinary: Rudd
BRISBANE, Aug 29 AAP - Prime Minister Kevin Rudd has praised the achievement of Barack
Obama who will today accept the Democratic US presidential nomination at a mass rally
in Denver, Colorado.
Mr Rudd said he had spoken with Senator Obama on the phone last week and described
the presidential hopeful, who is seeking to be the first black American in the White House,
as "a very warm person".
"I had a conversation with Senator Obama last week and we talked in part about where
he'd come from and where he's headed to," Mr Rudd told Fairfax Radio in Brisbane.
"It (receiving the nomination) is an extraordinary achievement for him as an individual
American politician."
He said they had discussed future plans for the Asia-Pacific region and climate change
during the conversation, only the second time the pair have spoken.
However, Mr Rudd said Australia would have a good relationship with the next US president,
whether it was Senator Obama or Republican nominee John McCain.
"Should he (Obama) win the presidential election I think Australia will have a very
good friend in the White House, and if Senator McCain wins ... he knows Australia well
as well and we would be well served with that outcome."
AAP ews/pjo/cjh/de
KEYWORD: US OBAMA RUDD
2008 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
QLD: Youth charged with rape
AAP General News (Australia)
04-24-2008
QLD: Youth charged with rape
A 14-year-old boy is scheduled to appear in the Brisbane Children's Court today on rape charges.
His arrest followed investigations into the alleged sexual assault of a 19-year-old
woman as she walked along Gympie Road .. Chermside on Brisbane's northside on the evening
of March 29.
The woman was taken to hospital and treated for injuries which included cuts and bruises.
The boy has been charged with rape .. assault with intent to rape .. deprivation of
liberty and robbery.
AAP RTV djp/pjo/af
KEYWORD: BOY (BRISBANE)
2008 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
NSW: Man arrested for smuggling ice chemical in coffee
AAP General News (Australia)
12-20-2007
NSW: Man arrested for smuggling ice chemical in coffee
SYDNEY, Dec 20 AAP - Customs officers and federal police have seized sample bags of
Cambodian coffee containing enough ephedrine to make $35 million worth of the drug ice.
More than 100 kilograms of ephedrine - the essential ingredient used to make methamphetamine,
or ice - was found during a check of air cargo at Sydney Airport earlier this month.
Customs said a 23-year-old man from western Sydney was arrested overnight after the
December 11 check turned up 105kg of the powder in the consignment from Cambodia.
In a joint investigation, AFP officers monitored the delivery to a home at Greenacre
in Sydney's west.
They arrested a man at the home last night and charged him with importing a commercial
quantity of the drug.
He was to appear in Central Local Court today.
The AFP said the bust may have stopped a substantial amount of ice hitting the Australian
drug market.
"This amount of precursor could potentially have made 90 kilograms of ice with a potential
street value of more than $35 million," AFP assistant commissioner Roman Quaedvlieg said.
AAP ab/was/jt
KEYWORD: ICE
2007 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
NSW: Iemma threatens to pull out of Murray water plan
AAP General News (Australia)
08-08-2007
NSW: Iemma threatens to pull out of Murray water plan
SYDNEY, Aug 8 AAP - NSW Premier Morris Iemma is threatening to pull out of the $10
billion plan for the Murray-Darling river system, saying the commonwealth has backtracked
on the agreement.
Mr Iemma has written to Prime Minister John Howard expressing his disappointment that
it appears compensation will only be paid to the states if they have all agreed to the
plan.
"It appears to me that they have changed the goalposts in two key areas - compensation
and no cost to the NSW taxpayer," Mr Iemma told ABC Radio today.
"If NSW doesn't get the assurance on these two points then the agreement with the commonwealth
is at an end."
The NSW government was the first state government to agree to the commonwealth's plan.
AAP nr/wjf/cp/jlw
KEYWORD: WATER NSW
2007 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
NSW: Main stories in today's Sydney newspapers=4
AAP General News (Australia)
02-15-2007
NSW: Main stories in today's Sydney newspapers=4
THE AUSTRALIAN FINANCIAL REVIEW
Page 1: The Commonwealth Bank posted a record $2.27 billion half-year profit but has
warned that fierce competition in the credit card market has led to loans being extended
to people who are already under financial stress.
Page 3: One of Australia's biggest property developers, Australand, has been drawn
into a corruption inquiry after it hired former West Australian premier Brian Burke to
promote a $500 million marina and residential project.
Page 5: Federal Coalition MPs will seek a meeting with Treasurer Peter Costello, urging
him to subject the $11.1 billion takeover bid of Qantas to greater scrutiny amid fears
the airline will be saddled with too much debt by its proposed private equity owners.
World: (NEW YORK) The US racked up a record annual trade deficit for the fifth consecutive
year, of which 30 per cent, came from trading with China.
Markets: The Australian sharemarket moved closer to the record 6000-point mark thanks
to a strong lead from Wall Street and a spate of upbeat earnings reports.
AAP vpm/ks
KEYWORD: MONITOR FRONTERS NSW 4 SYDNEY
2007 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
NSW: Comedian pleads not guilty to offensive conduct =2
AAP General News (Australia)
08-29-2006
NSW: Comedian pleads not guilty to offensive conduct =2
Outside court, Licciardello compared the case to a football match.
"All I want to say is, it is a case of four quarters and full credit to the prosecution,"
he told reporters.
"I thought they did a good job, they gave as good as they got.
"I'm really proud of our boys, they gave 110 per cent.
"I play tough, hard and fair and I think the results take care of themselves."
When asked if he was there as a friend, Mr Morrow told reporters he was just there
"to make sure the legal fees don't get too high".
AAP kjd/kaj/klw/evt/sp
KEYWORD: LICCIARDELLO 2 SYDNEY (REOPENS)
) 2006 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
Main stories in today's 1700 ABC News
AAP General News (Australia)
04-21-2006
Main stories in today's 1700 ABC News
SYDNEY, April 21 AAP - Main stories in today's 1700 ABC News:
- The Solomon Islands police commissioner says it will take many years for the country
to recover from the violence there this week.
- The new Solomon Island's Prime Minister Snyder Rini comes out of hiding and holds
a news conference at the prime minister's office in Honiara.
- Prime Minister John Howard says he doesn't expect the tensions between Australia
and Indonesia to be over after today's visit to Jakarta by the head of the department
of foreign affairs.
- For the second time in just over two months, AWB is looking for a new head.
- An appeals court in Vietnam upholds the death sentence for an Australian man of Vietnamese
origin for trafficking heroin.
- Eels prop Fuifui Moimoi is set to play his first game of the season tonight in the
match against the Wests Tigers at Parramatta Stadium.
AAP kaj/hn/
KEYWORD: MONITOR ABC 1700
2006 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
Monday, February 27, 2012
NSW: Gang rapists should stand trial together: Brogden
AAP General News (Australia)
04-14-2005
NSW: Gang rapists should stand trial together: Brogden
The New South Wales opposition says alleged gang rapists should stand trial together
so victims are not forced to give evidence several times.
Opposition legal affairs spokesman ANDREW TINK says accused rapists who've attacked
in a gang should be tried in a gang.
His comments come after a NSW District Court judge yesterday told a jury to find two
men not guilty of aggravated indecent assault.
The alleged victim had testified at the trial of two other men convicted over the 2003
attack, but could not bring herself to give evidence again.
NSW Police Commissioner KEN MORONEY says he feels sympathy for the woman in yesterday's
District Court case.
AAP RTV pj/pc/nf/bk/rt
KEYWORD: RAPE (SYDNEY)
2005 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
subscribing witness
Religious Broadcasting
RELIGIOUS BROADCASTING
RELIGIOUS BROADCASTING . The sophistication, diversification, and influence of religious broadcasting are greatly underappreciated dimensions of the global religious scene at the beginning of the twenty-first century. From India to Europe and from Latin America to the United States, religious broadcasting has become a dominant purveyor of religious teaching and entertainment for vast numbers of the world's population. According to a 2002 report by the respected Barna Research Group, more adults—141 million—experience the Christian faith in a given month in the United States through Christian radio, television, or books than attend Christian churches (132 million). Breaking this finding down, the report discovered that 52 percent of American adults had tuned into a Christian radio program in the previous month, that 38 percent of these listeners tuned in to a teaching, preaching, or talk show program; and that 43 percent of this population had listened to a Christian music station. The survey observed that women and African Americans were overrepresented among these listeners to Christian radio. Forty-three percent of all adults—some 90 million people—were watching Christian television or programming in a given month, about the same number of people who attend Christian churches in any given week. Somewhat surprisingly, more than fifteen million atheists, agnostics, and adult members of non-Christian faiths had some degree of exposure to the Christian faith through various forms of religious broadcasting.
Though precise figures are not available for other regions of the world, the ubiquity of religious programming on satellite broadcasts reaching every continent in the world attests to the fact that religious broadcasting is a phenomenon to be reckoned with by any student of contemporary religion. This influence has been greatly augmented since the 1990s by the growth of religious internet sites and programming. The dominance of religious broadcasting is a tale of entrepreneurism, audacity, competition, zeal, scandal, and triumph. Although this medium has its critics and detractors, both religious and secular, its explosive growth and influence show no signs of diminishing for the foreseeable future.
Origins
The origins of religious broadcasting reach back into the early days of radio in the United States. The first station to receive a radio license from the U.S. Department of Commerce, KDKA Pittsburgh, broadcast the Sunday evening vespers service of the Calvary Episcopal Church choir on January 2, 1921. Although the audience for the program was only in the thousands, the broadcast became a fixture of the station's Sunday evening programming schedule. Soon, the entrepreneurial spirit of America combined with the growing appeal of radio and the missionary zeal of evangelical Christianity to launch dozens of radio ministries.
The evangelist Paul Rader (1879–1938), pastor of the Chicago Gospel Tabernacle, was among the first to recognize the potential of radio to preach the gospel. In the summer of 1922, Rader brought a brass quartet to the roof of city hall and preached a sermon in a makeshift studio on local station WHT. The success of this cameo appearance encouraged Rader to reach an agreement with radio station WBBM to broadcast fourteen hours of religious programming every Sunday. Rader called his once-a-week station WJBT (Where Jesus Blesses Thousands). WJBT's broadcasts included the Sunday evening worship service at Gospel Tabernacle, choral performances, organ concerts, and popular shows such as the Healing Hour, the Back Home Hour, and the Bible Drama Hour. Rader discovered that many of his radio listeners wanted to hear him preach live and that the radio ministry increased attendance at Gospel Tabernacle. Rader's pioneering efforts in creating a diverse programming format and in partnering radio ministries with local churches would have an immense influence on subsequent generations of broadcast evangelists. Rader was aware of the medium's limitations, however, and he warned that radio did not substitute for a community that gathered to worship, sing, pray, and bear mutual joys and sorrows.
Aimee Semple McPherson (1890–1944) was another popular Christian evangelist of the 1920s who saw the potential of radio to spread her message. In 1922 she became the first woman to broadcast a sermon over the radio waves. A year later her Santa Monica–based church, the Angelus Temple, inaugurated the five-hundred-watt station KFSG (Kalling Foursquare Gospel). The station was the first in the nation to be owned and operated by a church. During the 1920s, KFSG broadcast the Angelus Temple's worship services to listeners who crowded into tents set up in nearby suburbs of Los Angeles, such as Venice and Pasadena. In the unregulated early days of radio broadcasting, McPherson and others arbitrarily changed their broadcast frequencies. This practice drew the ire of Secretary of Commerce Herbert Hoover in 1927. In response, the colorful McPherson sent Hoover a telegram stating, "Please order your minions of Satan to leave my station alone. You cannot expect the Almighty to abide by your wavelength nonsense" (Erickson, 1992, p. 127). This salvo was the first in what would become a long-standing battle between federal broadcast communications regulators and the entrepreneurs of religious broadcasting.
Christian evangelicals and fundamentalists were not the only religious ministries to recognize the potential of radio outreach during the 1920s. The Unity School of Christianity, a New Thought–influenced religious organization in Kansas City, Missouri, inaugurated radio broadcasts on station WOQ in 1922 and purchased the station in 1924. In 1927 the Ancient and Mystical Order Rosae Crucis (AMORC), a popular purveyor of Western occultism, purchased radio station WJBB in Tampa and began broadcasting a mixture of drama, choral music, metaphysical discourses, and news. AMORC's imperator, Harvey Spencer Lewis (1883–1939), became a pioneer in short-wave religious broadcasting and aired WJBB's programs throughout North and South America as well as the Caribbean, Africa, and Europe. His station was also the first to sponsor listener call-in programs and morning birthday announcements.
The 1920s and 1930s were a time of acrimony between fundamentalist and modernist Christians in the United States. Both factions sought to control the radio airwaves, and the early winners were the modernists. The U.S. Congress established the Federal Radio Commission (FRC) in 1927, and new regulations issued by the commission for licensed stations effectively closed down over half of the nation's radio ministries, many of them fundamentalist in orientation. Between 1927 and 1934, a movement emerged to reserve certain sections of the radio broadcast spectrum for educational, noncommercial, and religious programming. The Wagner-Hatfield Amendment to the Communications Act of 1934 would have implemented this spectrum allocation. The amendment failed, however, and a compromise plan allowed secular networks such as CBS and NBC to allocate a given amount of free airtime each week to public-interest programming in place of losing entire segments of the radio broadcast spectrum. These allocations were called "sustaining time."
Following passage of the Communications Act of 1934, religious groups across the fundamentalist-modernist spectrum sought a share of the free time allotted by the major networks. When it became apparent that there were more applicants than airtime, the networks and representatives of major national religious bodies such as the Southern Baptist Convention, the Federal Council of Churches, the Jewish Theological Seminary of America, and the National Council of Catholic Men agreed to sort out the competing claims in an equitable manner. The effect of this agreement was to shut out independent evangelicals and fundamentalists who were not represented by national groups. Mainline denominations defended their monopoly of the networks' sustaining-time slots by claiming a national constituency for their programs, in contrast to the regional constituency—the Bible Belt—of fundamentalist programming. Both individual denominations and parachurch groups produced a variety of programming in the sustaining-time slots. This programming ranged from the broadcast of local worship services to instructional documentaries, sermons, and discussions of issues by prominent religious figures.
The sustaining-time monopoly forced independent evangelicals and fundamentalists to purchase commercial time from such networks as the Mutual Broadcasting Network and the American Broadcasting Company (ABC). The most successful of the independent evangelical programs was Charles E. Fuller's (1887–1968) Old Fashioned Revival Hour. Fuller began his broadcasting career in the 1920s, teaching Bible classes over the Bible Institute of Los Angeles's privately owned radio station. By 1930, Fuller's Calvary Church Sunday worship service was being broadcast locally, along with a popular phone-in show during which Fuller answered listener questions. In 1933 Fuller decided to concentrate his entire efforts on his radio ministry and its flagship program, Radio Revival Hour. Through judicious agreements with regional networks, Fuller's program was soon being heard throughout the western United States. In 1937 the Mutual Broadcasting System purchased the renamed Old Fashioned Revival Hour for national broadcast. By 1939 the show had ten million weekly listeners, who were organized into a loose-knit group of financial supporters. The program featured popular gospel songs performed by a professional choir, Fuller's homespun homilies, and a reading of letters from listeners who had been led to God through the broadcast. The ministry's global listenership peaked at twenty million during the 1940s and aired over powerful AM stations in Europe, South America, and Asia in subsequent years. Fuller set the pattern for future independent broadcast ministries that were wholly listener supported and that were focused on personal conversion.
Another consequence of the sustaining-time monopoly was the formation of the National Association of Evangelicals (NAE) in 1942. The association's mission was to protect evangelical radio ministries like that of Fuller and to promote the interests of independent fundamentalists and evangelicals at the national level. The immediate catalyst for NAE's formation was a set of recommendations published by the Institute of Education by Radio, an independent group of academics whose charge was to monitor radio ministries. The large radio networks paid close attention to the Institute's criticism of Charles Fuller's broadcasts and to its recommendation to limit commercial religious programming on their networks. In response to this threat, over 150 conservative radio ministries formed NAE and two years later organized National Religious Broadcasters (NRB) as the official broadcasting arm of NAE. Since then NRB has been instrumental in lobbying Congress and the Federal Communications Commission (which replaced the Federal Radio Commission in 1934) on behalf of its member organizations. Members of NRB adopt a code of ethics that obligates them to maintain the highest technical standards for their programming, to obey governmental regulations, and to adopt high standards of financial accountability. The body's efforts have helped establish numerous independent broadcasting ministries on a solid financial footing and encouraged them to improve their programming quality.
A major change in radio evangelism occurred in the 1970s, when 75 percent of the listening audience shifted to FM stations. This left older, less affluent listeners with AM radio evangelists like those documented by Howard Dorgan in his book, The Airwaves of Zion: Radio and Religion in Appalachia. These ministries are run largely by independent Holiness-Pentecostals who have little formal theological training. Their style of preaching is highly emotional, unstructured, and reliant on the inspiration of the moment. They attack everything from lottery sales to roadhouses and from homosexuality to alcohol sales. Some ministries include in their programs recitations of long lists of people in need of prayer. These AM radio preachers can be heard on Sundays and weekdays throughout the United States, but especially in the Southeast. Although these ministries have difficulties attracting advertisers because of their elderly audience profile, they have survived into the twenty-first century on freewill offerings and constitute one of the most durable formats in the history of religious broadcasting in America.
The Rise of Television
With the coming of television in the 1940s, the competition between fundamentalists and modernists became even more intense. Each faction recognized the tremendous cultural influence the medium would have and the promise it held for religious outreach. The National Council of Churches of Christ in the USA (NCC) superseded the old Federal Council of Churches in 1950 and immediately sought to limit television access to those ministries approved of by its member churches. The NCC also requested that the major broadcast networks refuse to sell commercial airtime to religious ministries and that they accept the guidance of the NCC's Broadcast and Film Commission in creating and allotting any sustaining-time programming. These actions succeeded in limiting religious programming on the major networks during the 1950s to the Sunday morning sustaining-time slots and a few other nationally syndicated broadcast ministries.
The three most significant independent television ministries of the 1950s were those of Rex Humbard (b. 1919), Oral Roberts (b. 1918), and Billy Graham (b. 1918). Humbard was an itinerant Pentecostal minister who settled in Akron, Ohio, after a successful revival there in 1952. He began to televise the Sunday worship service of his Calvary Temple on a local Akron station in 1953 with the intention of providing outreach to the sick and elderly. This concern for those unable to attend regular church services would become a common justification for subsequent television ministries nationwide. Humbard also pioneered the religious spectacle genre of programming. He built a five-thousand-seat church in 1958 that featured state-of-the-art camera, lighting, and sound equipment as well as a huge stage that accommodated an orchestra, a choir, and broadcasting personnel. Humbard's Cathedral of Tomorrow Sunday broadcasts featured his musical family and his own folksy sermons. The broadcast was essentially a praise and preaching program that highlighted God's love and forgiveness and avoided controversial political or doctrinal debates. By 1971 Humbard's ministry aired on 650 television and 700 radio stations in North America. The ministry would expand to Japan, Australia, Africa, and South America over the next decade. Popular televangelist Robert Schuller (b. 1926) followed in Humbard's footsteps in the late twentieth century with his upbeat and carefully choreographed Crystal Cathedral broadcasts.
Oral Roberts began his career as a Holiness-Pentecostal minister whose healing revivals took him throughout the South and Southwest. With encouragement from Rex Humbard, Roberts gained the financial backing to televise one of his healing crusades in 1955. Within three years, the crusades were being aired on network affiliates to a steadily growing national audience. Roberts was the creator of the live healing-revival format that later became the vehicle by which faith healers Kathryn Kuhlman (1907–1976) and Benny Hinn (b. 1953) rose to prominence. Using high-speed film to compensate for the low lighting inside his tent, Roberts's programs captured the drama and excitement of seemingly miraculous healings by the laying on of hands. Here was religious television that was inspiring, entertaining, and emotionally gripping. Roberts went on to become a successful author, university president, and founder of a broadcast dynasty that is now largely in the hands of his son, Richard Roberts (b. 1948). Oral Roberts also pioneered religious broadcasting's foray into the variety show format. His program, Oral Roberts and You, featured upbeat contemporary music, bright-faced young people, the highest technical standards, and a Bible-based sermon. Roberts also broadcast hour-long television specials that featured popular singers such as Minnie Pearl and Mahalia Jackson and was one of the first televangelists to preach the "prosperity gospel," which claimed that God's plan for humanity included both spiritual and material riches.
The popular evangelist Billy Graham came from a more conservative theological background (Presbyterian and Southern Baptist) than either Humbard or Roberts, and his use of television would also be more measured. He gained national fame in 1949 when a planned two-week revival in Los Angeles went on for two months and attracted the attention of the Hearst publishing empire. Beginning in 1950, Graham had his own nationally broadcast radio program, Hour of Decision, with an estimated listening audience of twenty million. Following an influential telecast of his crusade in England in 1955, Graham had the clout to arrange the broadcast of his Madison Square Garden Crusade on ABC in 1957. The spectacle of thousands responding to Graham's call for repentance and conversion made these broadcasts riveting television. For the rest of the twentieth century, Graham's crusades became a staple of religious television. They incorporated footage of crowds pouring into athletic stadiums, music and testimonials by popular artists, Graham's powerful sermons, and finally his call for members of the audience to "come forward to Christ." Although Graham never inaugurated a weekly television broadcast, his Billy Graham Evangelistic Association was influential in the formation of the Evangelical Council for Financial Accountability, whose members pledge to abide by strict standards of financial accountability. His own association is a model of financial transparency and makes its yearly audit available to the public. The association's efforts have helped lift the stain of financial scandal that has plagued religious broadcasting ministries since the late 1970s.
While independent televangelists like Humbard, Roberts, and Graham were creating their media empires, mainstream ministries affiliated with the National Council of Churches created more conventional programming for use on Sunday morning sustaining-time slots. The most popular of these mainstream ministries was that of Bishop Fulton J. Sheen (1895–1979). Sheen was already an accomplished Roman Catholic author and speaker when he began The Catholic Hour radio program in 1930. This sustaining-time broadcast was aired on NBC radio and attracted millions of listeners. Sheen's first television appearance was on a historic Easter Sunday broadcast in 1940. It was not until the early 1950s, however, that he became a household fixture with his program Life Is Worth Living. The broadcast showcased Sheen's personal charisma, flair for the dramatic, and magisterial presence. Unlike the more conversion-focused broadcasts of Graham and Humbard, Sheen made Catholic moral teachings accessible to people from varied religious and secular backgrounds. His show was a success not only with Catholics but also with Protestants. The themes of his talks—sin, guilt, redemption, motherhood, and personal responsibility—were universal in scope and directed to everyman and everywoman. Sheen rejected the trappings of entertainment television and kept to a simple, dignified format. He began his program with a courtly bow and sat in a chair with only a blackboard, a table, and a Bible as props. For dramatic effect, he would sometimes pace the floor, allowing his clerical clothing to fall gracefully from his arms. He would also speak directly into the camera, giving viewers the sense that he was talking personally to them. Sheen's success as a television preacher demonstrated the significance of sheer personal charisma for building and maintaining a religious broadcasting ministry.
The Emergence of Independent Religious Networks
The most significant development in the United States between 1960 and 1990 was the creation of religious broadcasting networks such as Christian Broadcasting Network (CBN), Trinity Broadcasting Network (TBN), Praise the Lord Network (PTL), the Roman Catholic Eternal Word Television Network, LeSea Broadcasting, and Pax TV. These enterprises allowed for the development of diverse programming formats, nonstop religious television and radio coverage, and an expansion around the globe using satellite technology.
The forerunner for these ministries was Pat Robertson's (b. 1930) CBN. The network began with Robertson's purchase in 1959 of a UHF station in Portsmouth, Virginia. During the 1960s, CBN's programming was limited to a daily schedule airing between 7 and 10 p.m. The core program was The 700 Club, a talk show during which Robertson invited a host of evangelical authors and musical performers to discuss contemporary social, political, and religious issues. A live call-in segment invited those in need of healing to ask for prayer, exorcism, and words of encouragement from the show's hosts. Robertson began to operate television and FM radio stations throughout the United States in the late 1960s, and by the late 1970s he was sending CBN's programming via the Westar and RCA Satcom satellites to over sixty stations nationwide. The ministry employed a team of volunteer prayer counselors who worked twenty-four hours a day. These workers created a referral system that funneled new converts into local churches. Robertson retooled The 700 Club during the 1980s to resemble secular talk show and news magazine formats such as The Today Show and Good Morning America.
CBN has been a pioneer in the "media blitz," which saturates a given region over a concentrated time period with television programming, radio shows, videotapes, and literature. CBN's Worldreach partners with Christian ministries around the world to spread the gospel using media, discipleship, small-scale church planting, and humanitarian relief efforts. By the late 1990s, CBN International was broadcasting programming in ninety countries and in more than fifty languages. Robertson pioneered religious broadcasting in the Middle East with the launch, in 1982, of CBN's Channel 12/Middle East Television Network. In 1997 the network began broadcasting throughout the Middle East via satellite. Increasingly, other American broadcast ministries, many with millennial hopes, have targeted this biblical region. These include SAT-7, which transmits programming produced in Middle Eastern studios by Middle Eastern Christians in the Arabic language. This network is careful not to attack Islam directly and features culturally sensitive dramas, talk shows, children's programs, and musical programs.
Robertson's enterprises have set the standard for the religious broadcasting empires that have followed in CBN's wake. Robertson himself has been influential in the rise of the religious right as a political force in the United States. He and other broadcasters such as Jerry Falwell (b. 1933) have become respected spokespersons for the evangelical wing of the Republican Party.
Perhaps the most successful of the new broadcasting empires is the Trinity Broadcasting Network. From its humble beginnings in 1973, TBN has grown into a half-billion-dollar television empire that owns and operates over 22 full-power TV stations and over 500 low-power stations nationwide. By the beginning of the new millennium, the network's 3,500 cable affiliates allowed it to reach an audience estimated at thirty million daily. The ministry used twenty-six satellites to broadcast in twenty-four languages on every major continent. Trinity's programming is broadcast twenty-four hours a day and includes the biggest names in televangelism in its lineup. Founders Paul (b. 1934) and Jan Crouch come from Pentecostal backgrounds, and the Pentecostal worship style and theology pervades the network's programming. The network's signature program is the Praise the Lord show, which features both variety show and talk show formats. The Crouches cast a wide net and include a cross-section of America's most prominent Christian preachers and musicians on their program. The network has also perfected the biannual telethon, which raises funds for the maintenance and expansion of the ministry. TBN's international outreach has been augmented by its inauguration of TBN Enlace in 2002, which targets the growing Hispanic population of the United States.
Religious Broadcasting Globally
One of the most significant developments in religious broadcasting that has occurred since the mid-1980s is the rapid expansion of networks and programming around the world. Many of the longest-running broadcast ministries in Europe and Asia were radio-based. The earliest of these, HCJB, or the Voice of the Andes, began its short-wave broadcasts blanketing South America in 1931. At the start of the twenty-first century, it was operating three powerful short-wave transmitting stations that send out radio and television programming around the world in a variety of vernacular languages. Vatican Radio also transmitted its inaugural broadcast in 1931. Over the years, this Jesuit-run operation has expanded its programming to include a professional news service, sophisticated musical programs, daily mass, live coverage of papal audiences, and live video streaming of the pope reciting his Sunday Angelus prayers. The broadcasts are offered in thirty-four languages and are sent out on short and medium waves, satellites, and FM. The Far East Broadcasting Company (FEBC) started its radio broadcasts in 1948 on a humble one-thousand-watt transmitter in the Philippines. By the 1950s, FEBC was broadcasting programs in thirty-six languages and dialects to the People's Republic of China and other Asian countries using megawatt transmitters. FEBC airs its Christian programming over thirty stations to Asia, eastern Europe, Australia, and Latin America. Trans World Radio (TWR) managed to break through the prohibitions against evangelical programming that European governments placed on their stations during the 1950s. The station purchased broadcasting rights in the principality of Morocco and began airing its programming throughout Europe on its new 100,000-watt short-wave transmitter in 1960. As the ministry expanded, the station built AM, long-wave, and short-wave transmitters and hired local religious leaders and musicians to produce programming in forty languages. Like FEBC, this station was successful in circumventing the jamming efforts of authorities in Communist countries. Today its broadcasts are global and reach almost 80 percent of the world's population with evangelical Christian programming.
The fall of Communism in eastern Europe (1989–1991) opened a new field for religious broadcasting ministries. By the beginning of the twenty-first century, a number of broadcasters were blanketing the former Soviet Union and its satellites. Among these is Agape Europe, an interdenominational Christian mission organization that distributes Christian television programming throughout eastern and western Europe, and United Christian Broadcasters Europe, which uses digital satellite and cable technology to broadcast preaching, Bible study, music, and world-affairs television programming across the United Kingdom, Ireland, and continental Europe. A major development for Europe occurred in 1990, when the British Parliament passed a law that opened the radio airwaves in Great Britain to independent religious broadcasters. In 1994, Premier Radio was one of the first evangelical ministries to receive an AM license. It now reaches a core audience of committed Christians in Great Britain with programming that expresses Christian values without alienating nonbelievers simply looking for a quality radio option.
Religious broadcasting is booming throughout the world at the dawn of the new millennium. Australia is served by more than 40 Christian radio stations, Latin America by more than 150 Christian TV stations and 1,000 radio stations, and Africa by a growing number of active media outlets. Islamic broadcasters, such as America's Nation of Islam, Egypt's Voice of the Holy Qurʾān, and Libya's Voice of Islam are becoming increasingly sophisticated both in their programming formats and technical expertise. In India all religious groups, including the Jains, Muslims, Sikhs, Christians, and Hindus, have cable television channels that offer nonstop religious programming to their audiences. The range of shows includes everything from the sermons of Islamic clerics to the devotional songs of Hindu musicians and the healing crusades of Benny Hinn. Christian broadcasting still faces enormous challenges in countries such as Sri Lanka, China, Vietnam, and North Korea, where radio frequencies are jammed and broadcast licenses and air time are severely regulated by governmental agencies.
Critiques of Religious Broadcasting
A series of sexual and financial scandals rocked the religious broadcasting industry during the 1980s, and criticisms of television evangelists and their shows have come from across the conservative and liberal spectrum. These criticisms fall out along six principal axes.
First, commentators such as Quentin Schultze offer indictments of televangelism that are theological in focus. These critics allege that televangelism exploits well-intentioned but biblically illiterate believers by delivering a shallow "health and wealth" gospel in return for financial support. This indictment essentially charges that televangelists such as Kenneth Copeland (b. 1937), Robert Tilton (b. 1946), and Robert Schuller are distorters of the traditional gospel values of obedience to God, self-sacrifice, love for the poor, and a rejection of worldly fame and riches. In their growth to affluence, many televangelists have come to the view that material wealth is acceptable and desirable, and that listeners need only ask God for abundance, make a donation to their ministry, and wait for the money to begin rolling in. Gone, these critics charge, is the Protestant ethic that saw wealth as the fruit of diligent labor. Faith and Values Media, which is owned and operated by a coalition of mainstream Catholic, Eastern Orthodox, Jewish, and Protestant churches, has attempted to address these concerns by eschewing the on-air solicitation of funds.
A second line of criticism concerns the dominance of Pentecostal Christianity in religious programming—and this form of Christianity's dualistic, apocalyptic worldview. This critique indicts religious broadcasting for its tendency to view individual and societal moral conflicts within the context of a cosmic war between Satan and God. In this dualistic conception of ultimate good and ultimate evil at war with each other, the ambiguities and subtleties of human moral behavior are left unexplored and absolute moral principles are definitively proclaimed. The tendency of programs such as Jack Van Impe Presents and Hal Lindsey to read current events through this dualistic lens, critics charge, often results in a jingoistic nationalism that demonizes Russians, Muslims, Palestinians, or Arabs, while blinding viewers to immoral actions by the U.S. government and its allies. The focus of many televangelists on eschatology and prophecy often leads to categorical condemnations of other nations and belief systems and a singular inability to reflect on the collective social injustices that plague American society. The news segments of many televangelistic programs unabashedly blur the distinctions between professional reporting and theologically biased commentary.
A third line of criticism concerns the format and medium of television itself. These criticisms allege that televangelism turns congregations into passive, unreflective audiences and the gospel into another form of popular entertainment. The concern is that the link between the gospel message and people's individual behavior may be lost in the glitz, glamour, and spectacle of many forms of religious programming. This criticism is linked to another line of concern, the possibility that "virtual" communities of believers following televangelist superstars may supersede the vital links of mutual support found in neighborhood church communities. The rise of the internet and of internet religious ministries has added to these fears of individual withdrawal from the close interpersonal interaction that is crucial for emotional health. This criticism acknowledges the demonstrably positive effect of religious broadcasting for shut-ins and handicapped persons unable to participate in local church communities. At the same time, however, it observes that televangelists do not counsel people with marital problems, bury their viewers' dead, visit the sick, or perform baptisms, all staples of a week in the life of a local pastor.
A fourth line of criticism has to do with the increasing influence that radio and television evangelists exercise over America's political process. This criticism voices concerns that the many religious broadcasters who support the Christian right's political and social program are turning the national airwaves into a platform for the Republican Party's political agenda. CBN's Pat Robertson, Jerry Falwell, and Focus on the Family 's James Dobson (b. 1936) are just a few examples of religious broadcasters who are using their ministries to create bases of electoral and financial support for conservative political candidates. Constitutional purists see this growing trend as an erosion of the Constitution's separation of church and state and as an unwarranted and illegal intrusion of traditionally nonpartisan (and tax-exempt) religious communities into the nation's political life.
A fifth line of criticism takes aim at the avowed goal of most broadcast ministries—bringing the gospel message to the unconverted. A preponderance of evidence indicates that most regular viewers and listeners already hold evangelical, fundamentalist, or very conservative religious beliefs. What this means is that while religious broadcasting likely reinforces the existing beliefs and behaviors of its viewers, it is not very successful at reaching the unconverted. In the end, religious broadcasting may be mostly an alternative media source for people of religious faith who cannot find other programs that conform to their values and tastes. Put another way, religious broadcasting may answer to a pressing need in society for programming that reflects the conservative, fundamentalist, and evangelical worldviews of a sizeable segment of the American population.
A sixth and final line of criticism pinpoints the anti-intellectualist biases of many religious programs. Broadcast preachers regularly ridicule liberal ministers who tolerate moral ambiguity or who fail to speak plainly and directly. They rarely address the traditional historical concerns of mainstream theologians and instead focus narrowly on personal salvation and the spiritual condition of the world. Religious broadcasters tend to be biblical inerrantists who condemn historical-critical methods of scriptural exegesis and read scripture literally. Critics claim that this anti-intellectual bias dissipates the strength of respected traditions of scholarship as well as the historical experience of Christian communities. It also leaves the religious broadcasting audience bereft of the critical faculties that are necessary to identify the various forms of political, social, and religious propaganda and hucksterism that saturate religious programming.
Religious broadcasting shows no signs of slowing down in the twenty-first century. Radio and television ministries continue to proliferate around the world, and cable television has greatly expanded their outreach to developed and developing countries alike. Religious broadcasting via the World Wide Web also continues to expand, allowing space for even more religious entrepreneurs to attract audiences and build their ministries. As geopolitical developments increasingly take on religious overtones, radio and television channels will become hotly contested sites. The future will likely see partisans of various religious ideologies vying for airtime and political sponsorship. Thus it will be interesting to watch the role of federal and national regulators of the airwaves in the religious battles of the future.
Bibliography
Bruce, Steve. Pray TV: Televangelism in America. New York, 1990. This useful volume employs surveys and other data to explode the myth that religious television is converting millions of people to evangelical Christianity.
Dorgan, Howard. The Airwaves of Zion: Radio and Religion in Appalachia. Knoxville, Tenn., 1993. This book is a well documented description and analysis of AM radio evangelism in Appalachia by a professor of communications at Appalachian State University.
Erickson, Hal. Religious Radio and Television in the United States, 1921–1991: The Programs and Personalities. Jefferson, N.C., 1992. Erickson's volume is a somewhat uneven encyclopedic treatment of various religious broadcasting personalities and ministries; valuable mainly for its information on less well known ministries.
Fishwick, Marshall, and Ray B. Brown, eds. The God Pumpers: Religion in the Electronic Age. Bowling Green, Ohio, 1987. Two critical observers of American popular culture examine the broadcast ministries of Billy Graham, Jimmy Swaggart, Jerry Falwell, Jim and Tammy Bakker, Terry Cole-Whittaker, Marilyn Hickey, Danuto Soderman, and Beverly LaHaye.
Hadden, Jeffrey, and Anson Shupe. Televangelism: Power and Politics on God's Frontier. New York, 1988. Two prominent sociologists use social movement theory to examine televangelists and their followers and the cultural revolution in America that they are creating.
Hadden, Jeffrey, and Charles E. Swann. Prime Time Preachers: The Rising Power of Televangelism. Reading, Mass., 1981. This book was one of the first in-depth sociological studies of the influence and future of televangelists such as Pat Robertson, Robert Schuller, and Oral Roberts.
Hangen, Tona J. Redeeming the Dial: Radio, Religion, and Popular Culture in America. Chapel Hill, N.C., 2002. This excellent historical volume traces how American evangelicals used radio during the mid-twentieth century to build a powerful national coalition and define the parameters of their theology.
Hoover, Stewart M. Mass Media Religion: The Social Sources of the Electronic Church. Newbury Park, Calif., 1988. This important sociological and historical study explores how the electronic church affects the way American culture addresses pressing issues such as drug addiction, racism, and mili-tarism.
Matelski, Marilyn J. Vatican Radio: Propagation by the Airwaves. Westport, Conn., 1995. The best historical study of HVJ, Vatican Radio, and its role in propagating the religious, social, and political agendas of the Roman Catholic Church.
Melton, J. Gordon, Phillip Charles Lucas, and Jon R. Stone, eds. Prime-Time Religion: An Encyclopedia of Religious Broadcasting. Phoenix, Ariz., 1997. The most comprehensive volume available for understanding the personalities and ministries of religious broadcasting both in the United States and throughout the world.
Peck, Janice. The Gods of Televangelism: The Crisis of Meaning and the Appeal of Religious Television. Cresskill, N.J., 1993. An insightful examination of Christian Right leadership, separatism, and televangelism in America.
Schultze, Quentin J. Televangelism and American Culture: The Business of Popular Religion. Grand Rapids, Mich., 1991. A critical sociological and theological examination of televangelism from the perspective of an insightful Calvinist scholar.
Ward, Mark. Air of Salvation: The Story of Christian Broadcasting. Grand Rapids, Mich., 1994. This useful volume by the director of media ministries at Bob Jones University is a triumphalist history of the personalities and ministries that helped establish fundamentalist and evangelical dominance of the American airwaves during the twentieth century.
Gregor T. Goethals (1987)
Phillip Charles Lucas (2005)
Digital Learning Interactive and SMARTHINKING Partner to Take Online Learning To the Next Level.
Online Tutoring to Complement Learning with Online Textbooks
MEDFORD, Mass., Oct. 24 /PRNewswire/ --
Digital Learning Interactive, the leading provider of original, entirely online college-level textbooks, and SMARTHINKING, the leading provider of online academic assistance, today announced a partnership that promises to take online learning to the next level. Under the terms of the agreement, the companies will jointly market and sell their respective online learning products and services.
SMARTHINKING is the industry leader in online, person-to-person academic assistance. Students from over 50 universities and colleges have benefited from the service since the launch of the SMARTHINKING pilot program in January 2000. Through this partnership, SMARTHINKING will provide all students who use Digital Learning Interactive's textbooks with a free 30 day trial account including 1/2 hour of live tutoring or use of the Online Writing Lab. In addition students will receive unlimited access to SMARTHINKING's independent study resources including study guides, practice problems and research engines.
In return, Digital Learning Interactive will advertise SMARTHINKING as its preferred provider of online tutoring, and will feature SMARTHINKING's Online Writing Lab as a support tool for Digital Learning Interactive's fall 2000 history and literature titles. To date, more than 400 colleges and universities across the United States have used Digital Learning Interactive's online textbooks, which cover history, literature, French, and other subjects.
"Our goal at Digital Learning Interactive is to help professors and students use new technology to enhance and customize the teaching and learning process," said Robert Fisher, president of Digital Learning Interactive. "By coupling online academic assistance from SMARTHINKING with our online textbooks, we are enabling students to take the next step in online, interactive learning."
"By providing SMARTHINKING's services to students using Digital Learning Interactive's textbooks, we are giving students a personal academic safety net on the Internet," said SMARTHINKING President and Co-Founder Burck Smith. "By pairing online help with online textbooks, we are changing the face of online learning."
About Digital Learning Interactive
Digital Learning Interactive creates media-rich, online textbooks featuring original content, primary source readings, and interactive modules that actively engage students in the learning process. Digital Learning Interactive is located at 10 Cabot Road, Medford, MA 02155, and can be reached by telephone at (781) 306-8100, via fax at (781) 306-8106, or on the Web at www.digitlearn.org.
About SMARTHINKING
SMARTHINKING, a Washington, D.C.-based company, provides 24/7, person-to- person online academic assistance for core college courses through the use of cutting edge technologies, including virtual whiteboards, chat rooms, and personalized feedback tools. Carefully screened and rigorously trained e-structors(TM) are available to help students in real-time. By harnessing the power of the Internet, SMARTHINKING leads the way in offering supplemental support to students wherever and whenever they need it. SMARTHINKING may be found online at www.smarthinking.com.
Guaranteed! by ISPcheck Launches With Eight Customer Certified, Quality Web Hosts.
1 2 3 HostMe!, digitalNATION, INetU, Pegasus Web Technologies,
RackSpace, StormWeb, Superb Internet, and WebXess Make the Cut;
Become Top Web Hosts in the United States and Canada
WASHINGTON, Jan. 14 /PRNewswire/ -- Infotonic, publishers of the ISPcheck (www.ispcheck.com) Internet Service Provider search engine, today launched Guaranteed!, its much-awaited web host quality assurance program. Guaranteed! helps individuals and businesses find reliable service providers by pinpointing companies proven to surpass the expectations of their customers. Eight web hosts have earned the designation as charter members of Guaranteed! Unlike certification programs offered by industry associations, Guaranteed! provides an evaluation process which is independent of any web hosting company. Qualifying web hosts are selected based on feedback from each company's customers.
The Guaranteed! Program is integrated with ISPcheck, which currently allows its 4,500 daily visitors to search a database of 12,000 web hosting, dedicated hosting and Internet access service plans available from 3,500 service providers. A Guaranteed! filter has been added to ISPcheck's web hosting and dedicated hosting search interfaces, enabling visitors to limit searches to service plans offered by Guaranteed! providers.
"ISPcheck's Guaranteed! program provides proof positive about web hosting firms and their capabilities," said Rodney Loges, digitalNATION's VP of Business Development. "Its evaluation process solicits frontline feedback from current customers, which is the most credible testament to our service, and the most stringent, unbiased test of our quality. This program will recognize companies which meet customer satisfaction standards and raise the bar for the entire industry."
"Guaranteed! takes guesswork out of choosing a reliable web host," said Dmitri Eroshenko, cofounder of Infotonic. "Our charter Guaranteed! hosts represent the best the industry has to offer in terms of customer service, reliability and business integrity."
1 2 3 HostMe! (www.123hostme.com)
Founded in 1995, 1 2 3 HostMe! is among the top 100 domain hosts, serving more than 3,500 clients worldwide. Kenn Wagenheim, HostMe's president, believes the company's success is based on personalized service. While competitors put clients and prospects through never ending voicemail prompts, a helpful human answers every call at 1 2 3 HostMe! "It would be nice if (1 2 3 HostMe!) made computers as well," muses one client. "Dell would have a run for its money!"
digitalNATION (www.dn.net)
A true Internet veteran, digitalNATION was founded in 1992. dN provides high-end web, commerce and applications hosting on dedicated web servers. Sources familiar with dN often compare the company to a cult. dN's knowledgeable staff is religious in maintaining the smooth operation of the 900+ servers hosted by the company, and dedicated to ensuring the satisfaction of each customer. digitalNATION's clients include industry leaders such as The Discovery Channel and Crestar Bank.
INetU (www.inetu.net)
Dev Chanchani, INetU's ("I Net You") president, calls his company an Internet Commerce Provider ("ICP"). INetU's mission is to help clients move beyond a web presence to using the web as a business tool. Since 1996, INetU has supplemented its hosting services with custom developed electronic commerce services and products. Though INetU hosts over 1,000 web sites and has worked with IBM and AT&T, the company surprises new clients with its focus on customer service. "They know customers by name!"
Pegasus Web Technologies (www.pwebtech.com)
Jason Silvergate, Pegasus' founder, is determined to make his company next century's industry giant with state of the art technology and best in first-class customer service. Recently Pegasus became the first Internet presence provider to support Active Server Pages on UNIX. Even clients who joined Pegasus over the hectic holiday seasons felt "totally taken care of, like I was their only customer."
RackSpace (www.rackspace.com)
RackSpace's expertise lies in the realm of providing custom dedicated servers to clients around the world. The company's services range from bare rack and cage space for co-location to fully managed dedicated servers. RackSpace's clients are small and medium-sized businesses who demand secure, reliable, guaranteed Internet connectivity.
StormWeb (www.stormweb.net)
Ryan Sim, StormWeb's president, says he values each and every client. StormWeb's customers attest to his commitment: "StormWeb is always there for one-on-one help." StormWeb ensures the reliability of its network with a direct backbone connection and multiple T3 backup lines. This investment has certainly paid off in terms of its customers' appreciation: "Our domain has had 100% uptime since it went online vital for our VERY ACTIVE mailing list."
Superb Internet (www.superb.net)
In 1996, Haralds Jass, Superb Internet's founder, started the company after his previous web host failed to meet his expectations. In addition to a fast and reliable network, responsive support, and affordable prices, Superb prides itself on its dedication to meeting each customer's needs. Superb conducts bi-annual client surveys; the company's management takes action on each and every comment received. Suggestions are implemented whenever feasible and complaints are immediately rectified. One client reports that "with Superb I feel like one of the family."
WebXess (www.webxess.net)
WebXess was founded in 1996 to deliver reliable and user friendly solutions to the emerging individual and small business hosting market. The company has been particularly successful in smoothing the startup process for novice webmasters. According to a long-time client: "WebXess has worked with me every step of the way and never complained."
About Infotonic
Infotonic specializes in developing content and services for web site development and management professionals. The company's flagship product, ISPcheck, is an ISP search engine which provides details on 12,000 Internet access, web hosting and dedicated hosting service plans offered by more than 3,500 companies.
Sunday, February 26, 2012
Cronote Announces the Remind Button -- A Groundbreaking Internet Advertising Solution.
Irvine, CA (PRWEB) July 18, 2011
Cronote, a web-based company that provides SMS (text message) and email reminders, is launching the beta version of its Remind Button. The button is designed for website owners seeking to turn visitors into returning customers.
The Cronote Remind Button Beta is available for enrollment at http://www.cronote.com/remind.html. The Cronote Remind Button is user-driven and non-invasive; the consumer actively chooses the products that he or she would like to remember. It helps users remember your site when the time is right.
Businesses customize the Remind Button with a default message and delivery time. The advertising possibilities are broad and can be applied to product launches, events, sales, and everyday purchases. For example, the reminder's message could be "Product X is now available!" and the delivery time would be product's launch date.
Alternatively, businesses can allow consumers to change the reminder's message and/or delivery time. This is useful for visitors who are unable to make an immediate purchase but who would like to remember the product at a later time.
Reminders are sent from the Cronote server via SMS or email. Email reminders are free while SMS reminders are $0.02 per message. Businesses may freely use email reminders or deposit funding into an online account to enable SMS scheduling. Each scheduled SMS deducts $0.02 from the account's balance. If the balance reaches zero, new SMS scheduling is disabled, but email scheduling remains active.
Cronote is a web-based company established in August 2010. Cronote aims to provide quick and easy ways to schedule reminders (http://www.cronote.com). The Cronote iPhone App is also available for AT&T and Verizon customers.
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Read the full story at http://www.prweb.com/releases/cronote/remind/prweb8645847.htm
MOBILE TELEPHONY : KROES TO CHALLENGE ROAMING CHARGES AGAIN.
Commissioner Neelie Kroes (Digital Agenda) warned mobile operators last February that, on her initiative, in June, the European Commission would tackle roaming rates in the EU. Roaming charges are the extra fees imposed by operators when cell phones make or receive calls outside the subscriber's country of residence. The Commission finds that they are still too high in spite of two capping regulations.
In the draft regulation seen by Europolitics, the Commission will propose not only to prolong the European ceilings in force since 2007 on retail charges (billed to consumers) for calls placed or received and, since 2009, for text messages, but also to set a ceiling on retail charges for mobile internet access, regulated so far at wholesale level (prices charged between telecoms networks).
In detail, the ceiling for a call made by cell phone in an EU state other than the state of residence, set at 39 eurocents a minute today (excluding VAT), would drop to 32 cents on 1 July 2012, then to 28 cents on 1 July 2013 and 24 cents on 1 July 2014. For calls received in another state, the ceilings would drop from 15 cents today to 11 cents on 1 July 2012 and 10 cents a year later. The rate for text messages would be lowered from 11 cents per message today to 10 cents on 1 July 2012. These rates would be in force until 30 June 2016, adds the Commission.
MOBILE INTERNET
The data transfer market, which the EU was reluctant to regulate three years ago because it was booming, is now considered mature enough for an intervention on retail prices. Since the 2009 regulation, notes the Commission, cuts in wholesale rates for data roaming services have not been passed along to consumers, who still pay at much higher rates than national prices, rates not justified by the costs paid by operators. According to the figures cited by Kroes in February, European consumers often pay less than five cents to download a megabyte via a cell phone in their own country. However, they pay up to 2.60 per megabyte in another EU country (a single photo can amount to three to four megabytes). The Commission therefore proposes a maximum roaming price of 90 cents (excluding VAT) per megabyte from 1 July 2012, then 70 cents in 2013 and 50 cents in 2014.
FLAT-RATE ROAMING
Lastly, the Commission plans to innovate by proposing to give consumers the opportunity to choose a specific flat rate for roaming services without having to change phone number. From 1 July 2014, the original operators will have to inform their subscribers that they have the possibility to choose a competitor's roaming services. Customers will have two months to choose, but those who fail to act within that period may do so at any time subsequently. The service must be free and in effect within five working days and must guarantee that the subscriber keeps his phone number and national services. The SIM card would remain the same for national and roaming services.
Last February, Kroes expressed disappointment in the limited extent of competition between mobile operators. Instead of presenting more attractive offers, most have simply set their prices at the European ceiling rate. "Most respondents recommend further intervention" by the EU after 30 June 2012, the date of expiry of the current roaming regulation, the commissioner explained in the wake of a public consultation. This was certainly the opinion of consumer groups and of all the national regulators. It was also the view expressed by a number of mobile operators experiencing problems in terms of wholesale prices. The regulation of European wholesale rates will remain in force until 2022, the expiry date of the new regulation, which is subject to co-decision (Council of Ministers and EP).