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To: SmithL

I actually thought that this might be your answer. Frankly I do agree with you. However, I also think I can decide on my own what I choose to watch by using that old fashion clicker. I also think sharing my disdain with the advertisers is another excellent way to make my voice heard.

I do think it is great that folks who feel the way they do decided to take on the station. Their kids should be proud.


8 posted on 01/05/2006 10:23:02 AM PST by Former Military Chick (I salute all our Vets, those who walked before me and all those who walk after me.)
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To: Former Military Chick
WBIR to air 'The Book of Daniel'


WBIR management announced Thursday that "The Book of Daniel" will air as scheduled on Friday night despite hundreds of e-mails and phone calls from viewers asking otherwise.

"Daniel" is an hourlong soap opera that depicts a pill-popping minister who has conversations with Jesus.

On Wednesday, NBC affiliate WTWO in Terre Haute, Ind., was the first station in the country to announce it will not be airing "Daniel." Other stations across the country wrestled with the decision as well on Thursday.

WBIR has received more than 350 e-mails after commercials began airing in recent weeks. Jeff Lee, WBIR general manager, said the overwhelming majority of them are asking that "Daniel" not be shown here.

The e-mails were spurred mainly from two sources.

One group saw commercials for the show and wrote to the station. Another faction responded in support of a national campaign against the show launched by conservative watchdog group the American Family Association.

Responding to the e-mails, WBIR had a private screening Wednesday of the first episode. Around a half-dozen Knoxville Christians, invited by Lee, watched the program that stars Aidan Quinn as the Rev. Daniel Webster, an Episcopal minister who has secret meetings with Jesus Christ.

Webster's harried home life includes an adopted teenage son with an overactive libido, a daughter who is arrested for selling marijuana and a gay son going through an identity crisis.

In the first episode, Webster tells his congregation not to feel bad for yielding to temptation.

After the screening, the group agreed "Daniel" was offensive to them and their faith. They also thought the show should not air in Knoxville.

The Rev. John Stuart of Erin Presbyterian Church in Knoxville circulated an e-mail against the show a few weeks ago, and he was among those at the screening.

"Now that I have seen it, I want to send more e-mails out," said Stuart, who said he did not like the show's statements about theology.

However, the group also conceded that WBIR would also be facing a business decision and possible monetary loss if the program doesn't air.

Lee said the station declined to show a special centered on the magazine Maxim a few years ago. That special featured scantily clad women modeling.

Following the screening, Chris Johnson, a Knoxville-based Web designer, said he was prompted to take action. He plans to e-mail at least 50 people and spread his negative opinion of the show.

"I am not a bandwagon person," said Johnson. "I don't believe just because everybody says the emperor has clothes that the emperor has clothes.

"That's not me. I thought I would read the reviews and check the promos. I (wanted to) go to the screening with an open mind. I wanted to see if it was just hype by people who are just zealous (and) wanted something to fuss about."


9 posted on 01/05/2006 12:58:13 PM PST by SmithL (Jerusalem, Jerusalem, Lift up your gates and sing, Hosana in the highest! Hosana to your King!)
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