Ch 10: Pat Who?
Televangelism: Power and Politics on God`s Frontier | ||
Notes
Epigraph: Pat Robertson, "The 700 Club," 1979, cited in Jeffrey K. Hadden and Charles E. Swann, Prime Time Preachers: The Rising Power of Televangelism (Reading, MA: Addison-Wesley, 1981). Undated direct-mail fund-raising letter from the Democratic National Committee and signed by Paul G. Kirk, Jr.
Paul Weyrich, "Conservatism's Future: Pat Robertson," Conservative Digest, August/September 1985. Unpaginated offprint.
Hugh McDiarmid, "Bush Foes Win Fight, But War's Not Over," Detroit Free Press, February 22, 1987.
Results of the A. C. Nielsen special audience study were reported by CBN in David W. Clark and Paul H. Virts, "Religious Television Audience: A New Development in Measuring Audience Size." Unpublished paper presented at the annual meeting of the Society for the Scientific Study of Religion, Savannah, GA, October 25, 1985.
Pat Robertson (with Bob Slosser), The Secret Kingdom (Nashville, TN: Thomas Nelson, 1982), pp. 13-14.
Jim Castelli, "Pat Robertson: Extremist." Unpublished manuscript (Washington, DC: People for the American Way, August 1986), p. 26.
From a broadcast of' The 700 Club," cited in Jeffrey K. Hadden and Charles E. Swann, Prime Time Preachers: The Rising Power of Televangelism (Reading, MA: Addison-Wesley, 1981), p. 161.
Ch 10: Pat Who?
Televangelism: Power and Politics on God`s Frontier | ||