NCN shared the same satellitetransponder with the Playboy channel.[citation needed] This caused a great deal of trouble for NCN, not because they shared the same transponder at different times of the day, but rather because NCN attempted to broker time on its channel to Christian programmers who were led to believe (falsely) that every cable company that was carrying Playboy was also carrying NCN. In fact most cable operators carried the Playboy feed only during the hours that Playboy was transmitting programming, and they blacked out the NCN portion.[citation needed]
Jerry Falwell acquired NCN in 1986, renaming it to the Liberty Broadcasting Network and moving its headquarters to Chesapeake, Virginia.[2] At that time the network had an estimated 3 million viewers. LBN billed itself as the first "for profit inspirational network".[3]
The Liberty Broadcasting Network was renamed to FamilyNet in June 1988, and at the same time became a for-profit entity.[3] The network had lost about $3.2 million each year, and Falwell associate / former PTL manager Dr. Jerry Nims was brought in to head the new network.[3]
^ abc"The Gospel In Geosynchronous Orbit: National Christian Network Debuts". Religious Broadcasting. 11 (5). National Religious Broadcasters: 25, 27, 29. October–November 1979. ISSN0034-4079.
^Calian, Carnegie Samuel (1995-10-02). "Redeeming the wasteland? Christian TV increasingly uses entertainment to spread its message". Christianity Today. 39 (11): 92–103. ISSN0009-5753.