The Inspiration Networks

The Inspiration Networks, is a group of networks and related entities based in Indian Land, South Carolina, south of Charlotte, North Carolina.

The Inspiration Networks
Typecable television network & media production company
Country
AvailabilityUnited States, worldwide
Launch date
1990
Official website
inspiration.org

The Inspiration Networks has two cable television networks: INSP and operates the international network Inspiration TV, which is seen throughout the US, Europe, North Africa, and the Middle East.

The network began in 1990, when televangelist Morris Cerullo bought the PTL Satellite Network for $7 million.[1] PTL was founded in 1974 by Jim Bakker, a televangelist notable for his daily Christian variety program, The PTL Club; it had gone into bankruptcy after Bakker had been embroiled in a scandal.

Components

Major networks

The major networks in the group are:

  • INSP, the flagship channel
  • Inspiration TV, which serves the United States, Europe, North Africa, and the Middle East

The family of networks are seen in more than 30 million homes in the U.S. and more than 55 million homes in the pan-European region.

Globalization and Expansion

In 1993, Ossie Mills began working at The Inspiration Network[2] as The Vice President of Programming, Production and On-Air Promotion. He was heavily involved in the production of original series and made for TV specials, many of which earn multiple awards.[3] He also helped with the acquisition of off-network series and the brand development of the on-air packaging of the network.

In 2003, Mills returned to The Inspiration Network as its Executive Vice President.[4] He led both the domestic and international network under Inspiration Networks to drastically grow in the area of Non-Profit mission advancement.

Production facilities

The original facilities for producing the networks were relocated in the 1990s from Heritage USA in Fort Mill, South Carolina to a newly constructed production studio and headquarters in a business park in Charlotte, North Carolina.

In 2003, the Lancaster County Economic Development Corp. found the network some undeveloped property in the unincorporated area called Indian Land, in that county. The network applied for state relocation incentives, saying it would bring several hundred employees to a campus it called "City of Light", where it would combine its nonprofit enterprise with for-profit businesses. The state agreed to give the network tax credits worth at least $3.6 million over 15 years. In 2006, the state agreed to fund $1.2 million of improved road access to the campus. The network also got $560,000 through a program that allows state utility fees to be used for infrastructure improvements.[5]

In the fall of 2008, the State of South Carolina rejected the network's request for tax-exempt status. The rejection means that the network's land, buildings and equipment will all be taxed.[6]

As of mid-2009, about 200 of the company's 330 employees work at the site. Only two of nine promised projects have been completed or even started. Construction on condominiums, supposed to begin in July 2008, is now "long into the future" due to the effects of decreased giving and economic decline.[5]

Other entities

  • Media-Comm, a for-profit subsidiary that serves a wide variety of clients with services that include video graphics, editing, studio production, satellite uplinking, and fiber transmission. Its clients include CNN, Coca-Cola, the Speed Channel and ABC Sports, among others.
  • "Inspiration Video On Demand," a platform for cable television video on demand (VOD) delivery.[7]
  • "Inspiration Global", which provides broadband video content to non-English speaking audiences.[7]

Financials

Throughout most of the 1990s, the network did not ask for donations on the air, unlike many other religious TV stations. Instead, it generated revenue by selling advertising and airtime for programs produced by other ministries. In 1999, the network began soliciting donations from the public. That year, gifts were about $200,000. By 2008, they were about $40 million.

In 2007, the network's revenues were more than $69 million. Profits between 2002 and 2006 totaled $39 million.[6]

References

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