Large Christian television networks such as the Catholic broadcasting channel EWTN or the Protestant televangelism channel Trinity Broadcasting Network feature many televangelist preachers.
Ben Cerullo Ministries is a ministry founded by Ben Cerullo, son of INSP Networks CEO and American televangelist David Cerullo, and grandson of pentecostal televangelist Morris Cerullo
Its vision, mission and ministries are inspired by those of Christian Broadcasting Network (CBN), founded in the United states by televangelist Pat Robertson in 1961 and which is now one of the world’s largest mass media christian television organizations.
Launching as religious network CBN Satellite Service (a cable extension of televangelist Pat Robertson's Christian Broadcasting Network) in 1977, it later incorporated family-oriented secular programs by 1984, which became the channel's dominant form of programming for nearly two decades.
"Vanni Fucci Is Alive and Well and Living In Hell", a 1988 short story lampooning televangelists included in Prayers to Broken Stones, is about a brief return to earth by the title character, an inhabitant of Dante's Inferno
Bryant first became politically active in a high-profile way in 1988 when he served as an early organizer for the abortive presidential bid of conservative televangelist Pat Robertson.
Pat Robertson (born 1930), televangelist from the United States
In the special election on December 14, she narrowly defeated Michael Ball, the local Republican chair and a professional fundraiser for conservative televangelist Pat Robertson's Regent University.
He was known as "Maximum Bob" for handing out maximum sentences in convictions and was the judge in the trial of defrocked televangelist Jim Bakker.
Televangelist Jimmy Swaggart constantly criticized the song on his television program when it was first released.
elevangelist Paul Crouch, head of the Trinity Broadcasting Network, which continues to air the movie occasionally, published a novelization of the film.
1987: Chicago Tribune religion writer Bruce Buursma reported the experiences of one of Randi's fellow investigators, Andrew A. Skolnick, who was twice "healed" by Grant and once by televangelist faith healer Peter Popoff.
LeSEA added their own Christian programming, along with televangelist programming like The 700 Club.
WMOV-FM signed on in 1990 under the ownership of J.H. Communications as WXRI-FM; taking the call letters of the former station on the 105.3 frequency that had been owned by televangelist Pat Robertson until its sale in May 1989.