Vision Interfaith Satellite Network

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Vision Interfaith Satellite Network
Faith & Values Channel
Odyssey
Hallmark Channel
Religious Television Networks, 1995
Network (millions)
CBN / Family Channel
62.4
FamilyNet
35
Trinity Broadcasting
27
Faith & Values
24
Inspiration Network
9
Potential viewers of religious television networks, 1995.[1]

The Vision Interfaith Satellite Network (VISN) was an American

television network that was owned by the interfaith group National Interfaith Cable Coalition, in cooperation with cable operators.[2] The channel became known as the "PBS of religion" for the inclusive nature of its programming,[3] which was designed to "place its accent on dialogue rather than apologies."[4]

In 1992, VISN began sharing channel space with a similarly formatted cable network, the

Crown Media Holdings
. Throughout the latter portion of the 1990s, the channel hosted a continuously diminishing roster of religious programming.

Background

VISN was founded in late 1987 by the National Interfaith Cable Coalition (NICC). The NICC was an interfaith foundation created to provide programming and guidance to VISN. Many of the initial members of the NICC were also members of the National Council of Churches, whose membership had experienced trouble keeping airtime for local religious programming following media deregulation in the 1980s.[5] Startup costs for VISN were covered by several cable providers; spearheaded by Tele-Communications Inc., early financial backers of the channel included American Television & Communications, United Cable, Jones Intercable, Post-Newsweek Cable and Heritage Communications.[6][7][8] The network was owned by the NICC and Liberty Media, a subsidiary of Tele-Communications Inc.[2] Although the network was advertiser-supported,[5] it disallowed on-air solicitation during its programming.[8]

In part, the network was created as a response to the

televangelist scandals of Oral Roberts, Jim Bakker and Bakker's PTL Satellite Network, and the general popularity of conservative religious television such as the Christian Broadcasting Network.[2][6][7] Another goal of the network was to help ease the crowding of local cable networks by combining their programming onto one channel.[6] This goal was enumerated by Robert Thomson of founding company Tele-Communications Inc., who stated that "no operator has the capacity for a separate channel for each denomination."[8]

The Vision Interfaith Satellite Network launched on July 1, 1988. At its launch, the NICC was represented by 23 faith groups covering all branches of Christianity.[8] In addition, certain existing channels were represented with the inaugural members of the NICC, among them, the Gospel Music Network.[5] The group hoped to have a potential audience reach of 35 to 40 million subscribers by the network's fifth year of operation.[8]

VISN reached 6.4 million cable television subscribers by 1990.

Southern Baptist Radio and Television Commission. Both networks would share the same satellite transponder (and effectively, channel space), but the two networks would remain independently owned, run their own programming and maintain separate on-air identities.[9]
The ACTS network brought in 8.2 million subscribers, increasing VISN's total national coverage to about 20 million households. The combined network was branded as VISN-ACTS.

VISN-ACTS was rebranded as the Faith & Values Channel in 1993, with its programming being refocused to include more news and information content.[10]

The cable industry wouldn't put

rap, rock, polka and big bands into one channel. That's exactly what they've tried to do with Faith & Values.

— Bob Higley, vice president, TBN[11]

In 1995, originating founding sponsor

FamilyNet. In 1995, the Trinity Broadcasting Network called the Faith and Values Channel "a failed experiment in religious programming",[11] stating that its overarching approach to faiths and entertainment programming hurt its efforts at attracting viewers.[11] By 1996, the channel's programming was such that it was said to eschew its own religious label.[13]

Citing poor growth, the channel was relaunched as the Odyssey Network in August 1996 and given the slogan "Exploring Life's Journey".[14] At the time of the relaunch, the channel's subscriber reach potential had increased to 25.6 million households, and the NICC espoused representatives from 65 faith groups.[13]

The network continued to have problems throughout the late 1990s. External competition from

Hallmark Entertainment in 1998.[16] Odyssey's 1999 relaunch refocused the network's programming to include more family and values-oriented entertainment programming and even less direct religious content.[16]

Odyssey was relaunched as the Hallmark Channel on August 5, 2001,[17] featuring substantially reduced religious content. By this point, the channel was available to 30 million cable and satellite subscribers throughout the United States.[17] The Southern Baptist Convention pulled ACTS out of the network in 2003 and withdrew from the NICC.[18]

Faith & Values Media, a production company owned by the NICC, continues to produce content both for television and the internet. The corporation retains about 5% of the Hallmark Channel and has a long-term contract with the network.[19] In 2007, a subsidiary of Faith & Values Media acquired the ecumenical internet discussion forum Ecunet.[20]

Notes

  1. ISSN 0009-5753
    .
  2. ^ .
  3. ^ Martin, James (1994-10-22). "Tired of Mother Angelica?". America. 171 (12): 27).
  4. ^ "Network's Ecumenical Vision a Boon to Airwaves". National Catholic Reporter. 34 (27): 32. 1998-05-08.
  5. ^
    ISSN 1068-6827
    .
  6. ^ with Vision, depending on the religious makeup of the area.
  7. ^ . Conservative churches have told their story brilliantly," says [Rev. Daniel Paul] Matthews, [rector of New York's Trinity Episcopal Church]. "Now it's our turn.
  8. ^ a b c d e f Dukes, Anne (1990-10-01). "After the PTL fall, religious nets face a hard sell". Multichannel News. 11 (40): 22–25.
  9. ^
    ISSN 0034-4079
    .
  10. .
  11. ^ .
  12. .
  13. ^ .
  14. .
  15. ^ Allen, John L. Jr. (1998-05-08). "Ecumenical cable channel seeks partners". 34 (27). "National Catholic Reporter: 11. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  16. ^ a b "Odyssey Channel to be relaunched". The Christian Century. 115 (34): 1178. 1998-12-09.
  17. ^ a b Dart, John (2001-05-09). "Odyssey network changing again". The Christian Century. 118 (15): 10.
  18. ^ Westbury, Joe (2008-10-08). "FamilyNet building sale closes TV era". Baptist Press. Archived from the original on 2008-10-09. Retrieved 2014-05-30.
  19. ^ Downey, Kevin (2008-02-11). "Spiritual Syndicator's Gamble". Broadcasting & Cable: 20.
  20. ^ Imhoff, Frank (August 27, 2007). "Faith & Values Media acquires the assets of Ecunet". ELCA News Service. Retrieved 2010-03-15.

References