The Trinity Broadcasting Network, or TBN, is the world's largest Christian television network, Founded by Paul and Jan Crouch in 1973, the network now has a larger U.S. viewership than its three main competitor networks combined. It owns twenty-three U.S. full-power television stations and 252 low-power rural stations, and boasts five million viewer households per week in the U.S. TBN is carried on over six thousand television stations in the U.S., and on thousands of cable television systems in seventy-five countries around the world, where its programs are translated into eleven languages.
TBN began in 1973 when the elder Crouchs, along with former televangelists Jim and Tammy Bakker (formerly affiliated with Pat Robertson's Christian Broadcasting Network), rented air time on a local UHF channel in Santa Ana, California. TBN, then known as the Trinity Broadcasting Systems, spread from UHF stations to cable outlets and then to satellite distribution. Jim and Tammy left within months to start the PTL network.
Recently, TBN has been purchasing independent television stations to gain cable carriage, due to FCC must-carry rules. As a result, TBN is available to 95% of American households, as of early 2005. *
According to the TBN website, TBN has several hundred affiliate stations, although just 61 of these stations are regular UHF or VHF stations. The rest are low-powered stations, requiring a viewer to be within several miles of the transmitter. The network has grown to 47 satellites and 12,500 affiliates, reaching nearly 100,000,000 households globally.
Today Paul Crouch is TBN's president and chairman, Jan Crouch is its vice-president and director of programming. Their son, Paul Jr., is its vice president for administration. The network maintains production deals with their other son, Matthew.
According to a September 12, 2004 Los Angeles Times story, Paul Crouch, the president of Trinity Broadcasting Network (TBN) paid Enoch Lonnie Ford $425,000 in 1998 as a settlement over what Ford argued was an unjust dismissal from working at TBN. The settlement contained several other points, among them an agreement for Ford to be silent about an alleged homosexual encounter they had had in 1996 at a TBN-owned cabin near Lake Arrowhead, California.
In a statement released on September 22, 2004, TBN denied Crouch had a homosexual affair with Ford, but confirmed the payment of the $425,000 settlement.*
In Europe TBN offers a mix of American and European Christian programming via "TBN Europe", "TBN Italy" (Italian language) and "TBN Russia" (Russian language).
They operate an Arabic language channel for the Middle-East "Kanat al-Shefaa" which translated means "The Healing Channel".
In Africa they broadcast their programming via TBN South Africa and TBN Family Media in Kenya.
They also broadcast to most of Central and South America via TBN Enlace which consists of Spanish Language programming. Enlace Juvenil is their Spanish Youth network. Both are based out of San Jose, Costa Rica.
Asia is reached by TBN Philippines, and TBN South Pacific covers Australia, New Zealand and the surrounding islands.
As of 2005 TBN's broadcast signals are carried by 48 satellites and cover every major continent with the exception of Antarctica. Simply put, TBN is easily one of the world's largest broadcasting groups.
They are currently building a large studio in Altamonte Springs, Florida, although many doubt the building will ever be completed, as the original building permits are expiring and the exterior has yet to be completed.
TBN generates $170 million in revenue annually. It does not air commercials; rather, two-thirds of its revenue comes from viewer contributions and one-third from other televangelists' payments for running their programming. Its $120 million donation revenue is larger than any other television ministry. It has posted average annual surpluses since 1997 of about $60 million. It holds two week-long fundraising telethons per year, as well as numerous other solicitation drives. It maintains a direct mail database of 1.2 million names. As of 2002, it boasted $583 million in assets, including $238 million in government-backed securities and $31 million in cash. Also among its assets are a $7.2 million Canadair Turbojet and thirty houses in California, Texas and Ohio with values ranging up to $8 million. The elder Crouchs and their son Paul Jr. earn an estimated combined annual income of $850,000. In September 2004 the Los Angeles Times characterized their personal lifestyle as a "life of luxury." The network reports that during the first twenty years of the network's operation, Paul and Jan were paid roughly one-tenth their current income, with the amounts rising in the past ten years as they approached retirement.
Further investigation proves there is no building in Altamonte Springs, Florida. The station is in Pembroke Pines Florida and they just finished a new gift shop and VR Theater. The VR Theater is a state of the art facility that is free to all visitors showing 5 movies that share the gospel of Jesus Christ.
Around this time it was also revealed that Paul Crouch paid $425,000 in 1998 to a former male employee to keep him quiet about claims of a homosexual tryst with Crouch, and the AP also cited the recent newspaper reports about the Crouchs' "lavish lifestyle" as well as ongoing rumors of marital strife between Paul Sr. and Jan. Paul Crouch staunchly maintains that these accusations are completely false, and has voiced regret that he listened to his lawyers' advice to settle out of court. The former employee violated the terms of the settlement and is known to have an unstable past.
Paul Crouch Jr. voiced his belief that other ministries were concerned "they are going to be next on the hit list." R. Marie Griffith, a Princeton University scholar studying evangelical Christianity and the media, said that "to take the live broadcasting off...suggests...the chaos" at TBN.
American television networks | Christian fundamentalism and evangelicalism | Christian media companies | Orange County, California | Religious television stations in the United States | Trinity Broadcasting Network | Philippine television networks | Philippine television
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"Trinity Broadcasting Network".
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