Why? Is anyone selling prayer shawls on Christian radio now? Selling blessings? Chicks?
I think most of that stuff has since moved to late night Christian TV, larger audience potential.
Why? Is anyone selling prayer shawls on Christian radio now? Selling blessings? Chicks?
I would say most made the move to TV that could do so. The number of stations selling time to ministries (or ministries on paper) dropped significantly when non-commercial Christian FMs proliferated. All the major ministry time buyers became 'a share of donations' from the coverage area the station reaches. Stations either went music or just sold what they could to whoever would buy no matter the program content.
Funny thing, none of those ministries would tell me the percentage that was my share. I do know a contract for a 30 minute daily program airing weekdays at a good time slot would have been around $700 a month back then. With the 'share' we might get $100 to $150 a month. For some ministries you have to reach a minimum threshold to get a dime ($100 for most to $300 a month for Focus On The Family). Essentially, within several months your billing dropped to about 15-20% of what it had been as what had been paid ministries went to the 'share' concept. That left you with small ministries and the ones you really didn't want on the air being your primary source of income. Literally to make the 'share' work, you had to reach millions and millions of people (ie: several markets), barely.
You mean that the ministry has to get a certain amount of money from local listeners, and if it's above a certain threshold, the station gets paid?
Usually it's the other way around.
When a Christian ministry wants to start a radio outreach, they will fund the creation of the program themselves, but to justify it being on station WXXX, the listeners have to cover the cost of airtime.
If the listeners don't cover the cost of the airtime, the program goes away. (They track where the donations come from, and what station is responsible for those listeners/donations.)
Like most things in churches, if the faithful don't support something, it goes away.
Some smaller struggling stations will air "per inquiry" programs...but most successful religious stations (Salem, etc.) will not, as it devalues the product.
Has Christian radio always been funded this way, or did it change somewhere along the line? Was it the same system back in the 1970's and 80's, for example?
There were always stations that treated their facility similar to a "function hall". Want to use it for your event/program? Here's the price.
And they fill out the schedule and sell to as many as they can fit onto the schedule, at the going rate. (Many times these stations are a bit schizophrenic, as they can be a hodgepodge of differing opinions and theology.) Many times the owners of such stations don't have any religious affiliation at all. There was a phrase used "as long as the check clears"!
I disagree the 'per inquiry' or share is the bottom of the barrel. If Focus On The Family during the James Dobson days was bottom of the barrel, you are correct.
You're way off. Focus on the Family did not pay anybody for airtime.
Atheists and Satanists are not necessarily anti-Christian. They just don't believe in it, the same way that Christians are effectively atheists when it comes to all of the thousands of religions in the world, except their chosen one.I've really wondered if someone who was blatantly anti-Christian (Atheists, Satanists, etc.) were to want to buy airtime if WMQM's management would sell to them. I get the impression they probably would. If they would just call themselves a brokered station it wouldn't be as bad as the sham of them claiming to be a "Christian" station.
Atheists and Satanists are not necessarily anti-Christian. They just don't believe in it, the same way that Christians are effectively atheists when it comes to all of the thousands of religions in the world, except their chosen one.
And there is already anti-Christian programming on Christian radio stations: the infomercials for buying gold, quack diet supplements, Armageddon food buckets, doctors promising miracle cures for cancer, etc. -- and don't forget all the shady, corrupt evangelists living in mansions and flying around the world in private jets while begging their followers for donations.
And there is already anti-Christian programming on Christian radio stations: the infomercials for buying gold, quack diet supplements, Armageddon food buckets, doctors promising miracle cures for cancer, etc. -- and don't forget all the shady, corrupt evangelists living in mansions and flying around the world in private jets while begging their followers for donations.
And there is already anti-Christian programming on Christian radio stations: the infomercials for buying gold, quack diet supplements, Armageddon food buckets, doctors promising miracle cures for cancer, etc. -- and don't forget all the shady, corrupt evangelists living in mansions and flying around the world in private jets while begging their followers for donations.
In any profession there are bad apples. Yes, a few mega-church preachers have been corrupt. But that does not mean that the tens of thousands of ministers, evangelists, preachers, pastors and such are bad.
And stations that sell advertising to banks and other financial institutions are, by law, required to accept ads for all legal providers of investment services. Gold is a viable investment, and for many people it has provided life-saving resources.
Allow any kind of vitamin or supplement ad, and you have to take all that are doing business legally.
To select one investment over another is a restraint of trade and an illegal pracctice; same for any other field.
Any time a station, irrespective of format, favors one advertiser in a field over another, it is illegal. It is not a radio station's job to determine how good a product an advertiser offers is. That would set every station up for all kinds of lawsuits.
On the other hand, a company can refuse all advertising in a category, such as all alcoholic beverages, even if they are legal... as long as they apply it to everyone.
Which fits the definition of dolar a holler. In the case of stations like XERF and KAAY, which we're discussing in a different thread,the station management will let anyone on who flashes enough money in their faces. A perfect example is WMQM in Memphis, who carries Alex Jones. How does that qualify as Christian programming?