Christian Broadcasting News brings information about the happenings in Christian Radio and TV Broadcasting in the UK and around the world

Friday, April 21, 2006

Radio Seminars in Latin America

Trans World Radio has been taking Christian radio professionals from the United States to South America for years. It's an opportunity for them to see God's work overseas, but it also gives them a chance to partner with Christian radio stations working with TWR in Latin America.

This year, however, TWR's John Summerville says they did something new -- training seminars. "We take the radio executives and tap in to their years of expertise and allow them to do seminars."

Summerville was only expecting a few dozen people at the seminars in the two countries. "When we got to the Dominican Republic they put us up in a university setting and we had a 150 people attend. In Venezuela this next morning we were in a hotel ballroom and there were over 210 people should up for that seminar."

The seminar covered the basics of radio, creative use of radio and servant leadership. Summerville says these seminars were opened up to all radio professionals. "There were a lot of people from secular radio who also joined us for these seminars and then it gave us the opportunity to be a witness for Christ. Not only that, but it gave opportunity for our partners to gain credibility."

Sound of Life Radio in New York, The Light Radio Network in Vermont, WGRC Radio in Pennsylvania and Toccoa Falls College Radio Network all participated in the trip.

New UK Christian Radio Licence Awarded

Ofcom today (21 April 2006) announced the award of a further six new community radio licences, bringing the total number of community radio licences awarded to date to 99.

Today's announcement included the award of a five year licence to Cross Rhythms Teesside based in Stockton on Tees.

Cross Rhythms Teesside is described as "A radio station for the Christian community in Stockton-on-Tees in the 16-35 age group".

Contact information is:
Joel Hauxwell, Teesside Christian Media, c/o 27 Saint Ann's Terrace, Stockton on Tees TS18 2HT
Tel: 07887 553208
email: joel.hauxwell@gmail.com or crossrhythmsteesside@googlemail.com
website: www.crossrhythmsteesside.co.uk

Dismantling of Famous Short-Wave Station Commences

HCJB - The Voice of the Andes - has begun dismantling it's famous shortwave radio antenna farm at its Pifo broadcast site in Ecuador.

To accommodate new international airport construction near the capital city of Quito, missionary engineers and national staff have lowered a two-antenna curtain array that the “Voice of the Andes,” formerly used to air programs to the South Pacific and Europe. In 2003 the mission switched to local and regional AM and FM broadcasts in these regions while refocusing its Ecuador-based international shortwave outreach on Latin America.

Other antennas will also be dismantled in accordance with the mission’s late-December agreement with the Quito Airport Corporation (CORPAQ) which is compensating the mission for labour, but not providing funds for new site construction.

“We know that 30 towers at the Pifo site have to come down by December 2007,” explained Jim Estes, director of HCJB World Radio’s Latin America region, referring to antenna systems that could obstruct the approach of landing planes. Pifo is a town about 15 miles east of Quito.

Of 48 towers sustaining 32 antenna systems on the 110-acre site, another 18 lower-height antennas -- whose signals do reach Latin America -- will not impede approach. But those too will be dismantled by the time airport operations are expected to begin in 2009.

Mission leadership has determined that the station will not risk potential radio interference to future air traffic communications once commercial flights begin. Barring unforeseen circumstances, all transmissions from the Pifo site (including Spanish, Portuguese, German, Low German, English and various indigenous languages, including Quichua) are expected to end sometime in 2009.

Beyond that, Estes and Radio Director Doug Weber are considering various options, including the idea of building a new, smaller site in Ecuador as the mission reviews how shortwave radio in Ecuador fits into its objectives of reaching the world for Christ. Other options include buying airtime from other broadcasters or placing transmitters at other sites owned by likeminded missions.

“We’re going through a process right now with our engineering crew of studying all three of those options to see what the cost is,” Estes said. “And cost is one of the issues for us. We’re trying to be as economical as we can be.”

A 100-kilowatt transmitter has already been shipped from Pifo to HCJB World Radio-Australia’s shortwave site at Kununurra. That facility began transmissions in mostly Asian languages (in addition to English) in January 2003. Staff at the Australian site expect the transmitter to be on the air by early April.

Ten shortwave transmitters remain in Ecuador where Radio Station HCJB began broadcasting from Quito in 1931. The international transmitter site was later moved to Pifo in the early 1950s. Four of those transmitters were designed and built at the HCJB World Radio Engineering Center in Elkhart, Ind., including a powerful 500,000-watt unit.

Changes at Pifo are not expected to diminish the mission’s participation in the World by Radio (previously known as World by 2000) effort begun in 1985 whereby Christian international broadcasters committed to make gospel broadcasts available in all the world’s major languages.

Of the 28 World by Radio languages involving HCJB World Radio, those that once aired from Quito have since been shifted to other locations, including a shortwave site in the U.K. that reaches the Euro-Asia and North Africa/Middle East regions.

Of more than a dozen languages that air from Australia, two -- Bhojpuri and Chattisgarhi, both spoken in India -- are World by Radio languages. Still other World by Radio languages are aired by local stations and networks worldwide.

“We’re involved in radio all around the world, but our involvement is much different than what we’ve done historically here from Ecuador,” Estes said. “It’s more of an involvement where we’re helping local people develop their radio ministries to reach their own people.

“Here in Latin America we’ve helped [radio ministries] everywhere from Buenos Aires up to Havana with such things as studios, equipment, technical advice and training on how to do radio,” he added. “It’s quite exciting to see.” Since the 1990s the mission has aided local Christian radio endeavors in some 300 cities in more than 100 countries while facilitating network programming via satellite in all but one of its five global regions.

Assistance to local partners is facilitated by the engineering center, and the center’s pioneering work in digital shortwave radio also presses on, with continued development and testing of Digital Radio Mondial (DRM) equipment -- digital broadcasting for the shortwave transmitters produced there.

The Pifo site is part of that project, said Weber, who also heads the DRM task force for HCJB World Radio. “We have participated in DRM tests from down here with the DRM consortium, and we will continue to do tests over the next few years,” he explained. “We are very much monitoring DRM in its development in Latin America, hoping that we can eventually use that technology and be a pioneer within Latin America, not only in digital shortwave but in digital AM.”

An announcement 10 years ago had alerted the mission’s engineers that Quito’s long-awaited new airport might be built just six miles from the mission’s shortwave facilities at Pifo. Impending changes looked more certain by mid-1997 when aviation authorities said that due to potential interference, HCJB needed to dismantle its Pifo installations.

Subsequent plans to dismantle and move the Pifo installation to Ecuador’s coast were first tabled in 2003 by mission leadership, and later scrapped due to concerns about increased energy costs. Electricity for the high-powered transmitters has been generated at a mission-built hydroelectric plant in nearby Papallacta.

Ministry through the Airwaves

Christian radio is impacting lives in Asia as indigenous ministries,recognising how radio can be used by God to spread the Gospel, look to develop Christian radio stations.

As their network of partners has grown, HCJB has seen a need and responded. They offer a training program for their radio station partners in the Asia-Pacific region. It's called the "Radio School of Mission" and the program focuses on spiritual development, leadership development and management.

HCJB's David Kealey says that the training is on many levels, "So the purpose is to teach them beyond the technical parts of radio, because they're involved in, I don't want to say a business, but they're involved in a pretty demanding ministry that has a lot of components."

Important leadership skills, as well as technical and radio skills, are developed. Through the program, believers are being equipped for greater effectiveness in radio ministry. The intent of the training school is to equip leaders who will then go and teach the same materials to others, to multiply effectiveness.

Kealey explains their goal: "What do we want to see as a result of that? We want to see them producing programs that meet the real and felt need of their audience, so they need to know their audience. And they produce a program that meets that need but introduces, spiritual--if it's not a teaching, preaching, training program-- if it's a more general program for a seeker, we want them to have their follow-up material ready so that people can respond to the program and they can encourage that. So they respond to the program and they put them in touch with someone who could see them in a Bible study or could answer their spiritual questions. And we see churches planted as a result of radio station planting."

Kealey says radio ministry is opening doors for church planting. "So now we have a partner in a restricted country who has in the past year and a half, put in 14 stations and the specific purpose of putting in a radio station in a new city is for church planting. So the radio station, building an audience, and building a relationship with the audience, and responding to their questions--their programming is done in a way that the people respond with questions--and churches are being planted, hand in hand, with a radio station."

As a result of the radio station and church planting movement taking place in this restricted country, Kealey says they've received reports that each day four people per station are coming to know Christ. He says that the reports are "confirmed because they're in the churches and they're being baptized, they're growing, times 365. I mean, God is at work, drawing people to Himself; we're just thrilled to be a part of it."

The work is exciting, but Kealey requests your prayers, "All of this happens because of prayer. And God is at work out there throughout Asia, people are coming to know Him and it's just exciting to help them to help their people come to know Jesus."

HCJB's training is helping the Christian stations do what they do, meeting the needs of the people and impact lives for the Gospel. But they also need help. The school is scholarship-based. The cost is $2500 (USD) per student (radio station leader).

Tuesday, April 18, 2006

Manchester Passion is Digital Hit

The Manchester Passion, a modern version of the Passion of Christ, was enacted on Good Friday in Mnachester, England.

The Passion play was broadcast throughout the UK at 9pm on Good Friday on the digital televison channel BBC3 with a viewership of 539,000 (or 3,2% of the viewership) being recorded - a big hit for a digital channel.

Saturday, April 08, 2006

Christian Vision buy European TX Site

T-Systems and its parent Deutsche Telkom AG have completed the sale of the Julich shortwave transmission facility to UK charity Christian Vision.

Julich, in north-west Germany, is recognised as one of the leading transmission sites in Europe, equipped with 100kW analogue and digital transmitters and numerous antennae with global reach.

Christian Vision will take full operational control at the end of 2007 and will broadcast in both analogue and DRM in many languages reaching Europe, Africa, the Middle East, Russia and West Asia.

Web Links


Shortwave broadcasting facility at Julich

In 1956 the WDR broadcaster established the first short wave transmitter near the borough Mersch. In the subsequent years this site was expanded.

On September 1st, 1961 this site was handed over to the German Federal Post for establishing the German foreign broadcasting service, "Deutsche Welle".

In the course of time 10 transmitters of 100 kilowatts were installed, with transmitting antennas comprising enormous dipole arrays between free standing steel framework towers.

Today these transmitters are rented to the predominantly to non-German broadcasting organisations.

In the 1990's a transmitting plant for medium wave was installed, using a long wire antenna which is spun from a tower on the transmitter site. It was intended to be used for transmission of the programme of radio Viva on 702 kHz, but it never went into regular service for this broadcaster. Since December 6, 2004, this mediumwave transmitter is used to broadcast the programmes of German commercial broadcaster "TruckRadio" on 702 kHz.

Julich is one of the lead tranmission sites for test and experiemental broadcasts of Digital Radio Mondial (DRM) - short wave digital radio.

Tuesday, April 04, 2006

R Music TV Launches on Sky Channel 370

R Music TV, an offshoot of Revelation TV, has launched on Sky 370.

Dedicated to positive music, R Music TV will broadcast 24/7 and is positioned along with all the other music channels on the Sky EPG.

The purpose of the channel is to provide a music alternative for young people, giving a platform to music which is almost all new to the UK.

R Musc TV will provide a focus for UK music but will also build relationships with music industries in other countires where positive music flourishes.

The channel will also be building interactive content with texts, jukebox, voting and games



Short story writers needed

When Trans World Radio Asia conducted a survey on one of their Websites, they found that over 90 percent of those responding like stories. So, TWR is looking to expand the number of stories on that Website, abc111.net, a site that's helping Chinese youth learn English.

Accoring to TWR's Internet Ministry Team, they have a few thousand English learners visiting their site some 30,000 times each month. However, they only have three stories that are updated each week and they need more.

If you like to write stories, TWR would like you to consider publishing some of your work on TWR's Website.

Since their goal is to serve an audience who's learning English, they need easy-to-read stories in English, like children and youth stories. They can either be Christian stories with a spiritual lesson, or just stories that are morally and ethically sound. Once they're written and sent to TWR, they'll publish those stories one episode at a time.

The stories must be very short. 150 words for the beginner level readers. 200 to 250 words for slightly more advanced readers.

TWR would also like you to record your stories slowly so the Chinese audience can listen to the story, to help with pronunciations.

If you'd like to help TWR and abc111.net with this outreach, go to abc111.net/contributors/.