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"An International Resource for Entertainment and Media
Leaders"
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SPECIAL REPORT
An Important Memo on Hurricane Katrina for
Faith-Based Media Professionals
--Phil Cooke
Friday, September 2, 2005
The morning of 9/11, I sent a working
memo to faith-based broadcasters around the country
encouraging them to breakthrough the regular schedule of
programming and deal directly with the spiritual issues
surrounding the tragedy in New York. Religious radio and
television networks and stations have often become so
dependent on regular daily and weekly programming
income, that historically, incredible disasters have
happened in America, and yet they've been virtually
ignored in the religious media because broadcasters
refused to break into regularly scheduled programming.
But on 9/11 everything changed.
Faith-based radio and television stations and media
ministries responded to the memo, changing programming,
and reporting stories of help and hope, that made a
significant difference for millions of people.
Today, I'm asking the religious media
community to do the same. The situation in the New
Orleans area is far greater than anyone could have
imagined. Stories of shooting, looting, deaths due to
lack of medicine and food, children in desperate
situations, and more, compel us to act now.
The mainstream media are covering the
facts. It's up to Christian broadcasters to fill in the
blanks by offering stories of hope, spiritual
encouragement, fundraising, and more. As you have your
production and creative meetings this week, here are
some ideas to consider:
- Don't duplicate the mainstream media.
They have the funding and resources to do a far better
job of reporting the current situation. They're
bringing the facts, and doing it well. Consider that
covered. Instead, look for the types of stories and
reports that a faith-based broadcaster can do well
because of your unique expertise.
- Make immediate contact with churches,
religious groups, and relief organizations that you
already have a relationship with in the area. When you
know people, you can cut through red tape and make
things happen much more quickly.
- Find out the real needs. Don't guess.
Major groups like Feed the Children and The Salvation
Army are experts in these situations. Use their
advice, and broadcast that advice to your audience.
Also, urge your audience to give to legitimate
ministry and relief organizations. Avoid impulse
giving to questionable charities, and focus the
support where it can do the most good. If you raise
money through your media organization, take the time
to send it to the most effective ministries and relief
groups.
- If you know people in the area, get
first hand reports "from the front." Hearing from
people who have experienced the crisis is always more
compelling on radio and television. Establish phone
contact if possible, and do live interviews on the air
if you can.
- The mainstream media will do plenty
of negative stories, and criticism of the local and
national government response. You should focus on
stories of hope. Who survived? Where are the
miraculous stories? Let's try to inspire our audience
to pray, to give, and to believe for a resolution to
the crisis. If you're a media outlet in the area,
focus on inspiring your audience to rise above this
terrible situation.
- The Christian
Emergency Network is an
excellent source for information. Check them out at:
www.christianemergencynetwork.com.
- The TV Committee of the National
Religious Broadcasters organization has created a TV
News Forum, designed to help share footage and other
information to faith-based broadcasters (for this and
other issues). You can subscribe by sending a blank
email (from your preferred email address) to tvnewsforum-subscribe@lists.gospelcom.net. Stan Jeter of CBN News is the moderator of
the forum and can be reached at Stan.jeter@cbn.org. I
would encourage you to check out that resource and get
Stan's advice.
- Remember that raising money is
important, but getting the correct information out,
inspiring others to hope and pray for a successful
outcome, and teaching what the Bible says about rising
above our circumstances is just as critical. As I said
before, don't duplicate what others are doing. Offer
your audience something that you, as a faith-based
broadcaster, can uniquely bring to the table.
- If you know of local media outlets
(radio, TV, or internet) that were damaged or
destroyed by the storm or it's aftermath, contact them
and help get them back on the air. Having a
faith-based media presence at the heart of the
disaster would be fantastic, and if we can send them
equipment, resources, or money to help them get back
up and running, it would be a great help to the local
viewing and listening audience.
- Finally, make your audience realize
this is a long term situation. It will be months
before things are even close to being back to normal.
So please don't make a big deal on your programs now,
and then drop it in a week. Stay with the story. Keep
encouraging, inspiring, and making a difference until
people's lives are substantially back to normal.
This is a unique moment in history, and
how we as media professionals react will have a
significant impact on how the people respond. Pray and
seek God for what you can do that will make a
difference, and please, think in new and innovative ways
that will break through the cultural clutter and make a
difference for millions of people.
Thanks,
phil cooke president / creative
director www.cookepictures.com
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KATRINA: WHAT YOU CAN DO TO
HELP Capitol Hill Prayer Partners Sep 3,
2005 | CAPITOL HILL
PRAYER PARTNERS
PARTNERS IN PRAYER FOR THE NATION
P.O. Box 5152, Herndon, VA 20172
Email:
chpp@patriot.net
KATRINA: WHAT YOU CAN DO TO
HELP
Saturday, Sept. 3, 2005
_____________________________________________________________________
KATRINA REPONSE INITIATIVE
Mobilizing the
Church for Coordinated Response
Let God arise and His
enemies be scattered. For the first time in our history the
Church is being mobilized in a coordinated response to a
disaster. The program is called "The Katrina Response
Initiative".
Hurricane Katrina will be remembered
as one of the most devastating hurricanes in the history of
the United States. She left a path of destruction 200 miles
wide that ran deep into the heart of our nation. Thousands of
lives were lost, millions of citizens displaced, and damage
ran well into the billions of dollars. Many lost everything.
How will the Church respond?
Federal, State, and Local
response organizations are overwhelmed. Stretched thin on
resources, government response can only take us so far. Help
is needed now and long into the future. The Church has the
skills and the resources to respond effectively in the short
term and rebuild our communities in the long term. Now more
than ever before, the Church is positioned to provide hope
where there is none. But we must organize.
The purpose
of this project is to provide a venue and a framework for a
coordinated response by the Church. A project team has been
mobilized to manage the initiative. Guidance and oversight is
being provided by a Katrina Advisory Team. A website is being
used to capture and post identified needs and provide project
updates. A toll free phone bank has been established to manage
donations of goods and services. Financial donations can be
made to the Katrina Hope Fund. A US wide network of warehouses
has linked up to provide staging areas and logistics for
management and movement of donated materials. Volunteers are
being correlated to a list of identified support teams across
a broad range of needed services. Sites are being established
within the disaster zone as Hope Centers to reach out into the
surrounding communities with basic life support in the short
term and restoration and recovery activities in the long.
Arrangements are also being made to provide shelter for
displaced persons as they depart the disaster zone into many
different Cities of Refuge and Family Restoration Teams are
being established to minister to the needs of these people.
The Katrina Response Initiative is designed to return
the Church to her rightful position of being a light and a
hope to the communities in which we serve. The need is
desperate. The time is short. God is doing a fast work. We
invite you to partner with us to reach out to those in need.
If we work together, this could be the finest hour of the
Church. To God be all the glory.
If you are interested
in more detailed information or how you can help, go to the
web site at www.katrinaresponse.net or contact
the KRI team at: katrina@hisg.org.
THE KATRINA
RESPONSE INITIATIVE IS FULLY ENDORSED BY CAPITOL HILL PRAYER
PARTNERS. We encourage all of you to go to prayerfully
consider how you might respond in a tangible way to aide those
who are suffering from this tragedy. Please pray, too, for the
success of this and all other ongoing relief projects in the
United States. Working together, we CAN be " "His hands and
feet" in this desperate hour.
Thy people shall
volunteer freely in the day of Thy power. (Ps. 110:3
NASB)
_____________________________________________________________________
Capitol Hill Prayer Partners (CHPP) is a 501(c)(3),
tax-exempt, faith-based, ministry, dedicated to praying for
our leaders (1 Tim. 2:1,2). CHPP relies solely on the gifts of
our readers to continue this work; thus we greatly appreciate
your help in supporting this publication. Contributions may be
sent to: Capitol Hill Prayer Partners, P.O. Box 5152, Herndon,
VA 20172-1970. Please make checks payable to: CHPP.
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