Faith and finances find a home on television
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The effects of the recent terrorist attacks in London are being felt
throughout the world and here at home.
For those trying to have a memorable time at the Orange County
Fair or shopping in overcrowded malls, it might have been difficult
to ignore the shocking images on television.
Many of us wouldn’t want to admit it, but the terrorists have
altered the way we live. The federal government has set
upantiterrorist agencies and created tough new laws. In many ways,
the power of the state has increased significantly at the expense of
the people’s rights and liberties.
And people have become more religious.
After the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, many people across
the country -- and around the world -- returned to their roots to
seek spiritual guidance, joining local houses of worship and making
themselves open to the word of God.
And for those who can’t attend church services, a new group of
entrepreneurs has taken religion into their homes.
One of the entrepreneurs is Marcus Lamb, president and CEO of
Daystar Television Network, which is now engaged in a battle to buy
KOCE-TV from the Coast Community College District.
As one of Lamb’s viewers explained, “We can’t (physically) go to
church, but we can (attend services) with Daystar.”
People can hear the word of God from their television sets as they
lie on their couches, drinking cola and munching hot dogs and potato
chips.
Thus the presumed reason behind Lamb’s fight to come to Orange
County and gain more viewers here. In the fight over KOCE-TV Channel
50, Lamb’s lawyer is charging religious discrimination by college
district officials and is seeking monetary damages.
Since nothing is free in this world, Daystar encourages its
viewers to pledge money over the telephone and through the Internet
to support the church. According to Lamb, God will return every
dollar the viewers pledge. “Sow your seed (money) with an expected
result! Sow your seed with expected reaction! Sow your seed with an
expected harvest,” Lamb said during Daystar’s “Share-A-Thon.”
If there is a business sector filling up its coffers with dollars
after every terrorist attack -- other than the oil industry, that is
-- it would have to be Christian networks.
Daystar pledged to pay $40 million in cash for KOCE-TV. If they
were publicly traded, I wouldn’t hesitate for a minute to buy the
stock of Daystar or its rival, Costa Mesa-based Trinity Broadcasting
Network.
Today both of them compete for the same market. TBN is ahead, but
that could change soon if Daystar manages to buy KOCE-TV, allowing it
to challenge TBN in its strongholds in Orange County and the Los
Angeles area.
“There is a huge demand across America for a true alternative to
TBN,” Lamb wrote in October 2003.
TBN’s reach extends across the nation through its many stations.
According to a report in the Los Angeles Times, it collects more than
$120 million a year from viewers of its Christian programming and has
$583 million in assets.
Paul Crouch, TBN’s president and founder, makes $403,700 a year.
His wife Jan takes home $361,000. Both of them have an array of
perks, including a private jet. They live like Saudi Arabian royalty
in a huge mansion in the Newport Beach area.
Daystar owns 40 stations throughout the country. The network
reaches about 48 million homes, or 120 million viewers, in the United
States, and many more throughout the world. More than 100 countries
receive Daystar’s Christian signals.
Like their counterparts at TBN, Marcus Lamb and his wife Joni have
a pleasant life, enjoying many luxuries at their Texas homeDo we want
to have another Paul and Jan in the Newport-Mesa area? I don’t think
so.
For those of us who don’t buy cable television service, PBS and
KOCE-TV offer valuable alternatives to commercial television. I’m
willing to pledge a buck so that KOCE-TV continues to reach my
daughter in my house with PBS programming.
Let’s see if God hears my voice.
* HUMBERTO CASPA is a Costa Mesa resident and bilingual writer. He
can be reached by e-mail at [email protected].
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