K-LOVE Discontinues The Shack Promotion

KLOVE CarNear the end of February and into the first week of March, K-LOVE promoted the movie The Shack on air. It had all of the trappings of a paid promotional campaign, complete with a ticket giveaway contest.  However, many K-LOVE listeners were not amused (e.g., Tim Challies), viewing The Shack as promoting heresy.
In response, K-LOVE discontinued the promotion. The announcement was low-key and in response to a listener post on the K-LOVE Facebook page:

Thanks for sharing your concerns, Julie. We discontinued this promotional earlier this week and are no longer airing it. If you do have any questions or concerns about our biblical values, you’re more than welcome to call our K-LOVE pastors at 1-800-525-5683.

Just a few days prior to yesterday, K-LOVE defended the promotion but the reaction may have been strong enough to change their minds.
While I cannot be sure, I think the promotion was probably about to end anyway since the ticket giveaway campaign ended on March 5. I wrote K-LOVE about the details but did not hear anything back.
K-LOVE can be responsive to listeners when the leaders perceive it will impact them. I will be watching their Spring fund drive to see if they modify any of their claims to make the promotion more transparent.
 

K-LOVE Removes NASCAR Content; Still Sponsoring Michael McDowell

KLOVE nascarNote: When I first published this post, I wondered if K-LOVE had dropped sponsorship. According to Gene Krcelic at McDowell Motorsports, K-LOVE is still racing.
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(Original post)
Radio giant K-LOVE may have dropped sponsorship of car #95 with Michael McDowell as driver. A search of K-LOVE’s website finds a link to the old article introducing McDowell, but when one clicks the link, it goes nowhere. A site search shows several news article relating to NASCAR were once available via K-LOVE news, but they have been removed from the site. An archived page regarding McDowell and K-LOVE is available via the Wayback Machine.
I asked K-LOVE and Michael McDowell for comment but there has been no reply. I have been unable to find any indication from NASCAR sources that K-LOVE will be involved in the 2017 season.
I wrote about the K-LOVE NASCAR connection several months ago as an indication that K-LOVE may not need donor money just to keep stations on the air.
UPDATE: Gene Krcelic with Michael McDowell Motorsports wrote to say K-LOVE is still a sponsor. No word from K-LOVE about why all NASCAR content has been removed.

If You Want to Feed the Hungry, Don't Give (As Much) to a Radio Station

WAY FTHWAY-FM’s pledge drive is over. I assume they reached their quota of Feed the Hungry pledges ($100) because the ad has now been removed from the front page of the website. Last week, I wrote critically about WAY-FM’s claim that a $100 donation to the station helped a child in South Sudan have food for a month. As far as I can determine, the children will get food no matter what WAY-FM donors do.
After I published my response to the Feed the Hungry radio promotion, I was contacted by an individual who did not want to named but who challenged my understanding of the facts. This person said that a donor at Feed the Hungry donated sufficient money to cover the promise of a month of food for each donation of $100 to WAY-FM for 1000 kids.* However, if WAY-FM listeners did not come through, the Feed the Hungry donor was under no obligation to donate the full amount (about $6000). Thus, if 900 donors gave $100, then the Feed the Hungry donor would only give $5400.
To me, I don’t know which is more troubling. WAY-FM promising something that isn’t happening, or a donor holding food hostage unless American Christians give $100 to a radio station.
Whether it is K-LOVE and a warm coat or WAY-FM and a month of food, I question this means of raising funds. Using cold and hungry children as bait to raise money is disturbing. I would like to see this end as a fund raising practice. Do cross promotion, but don’t make aid to a child contingent on guilt and manipulation.
Thus far, when I have asked questions about whether or not there is a real donor behind either coats or food for a month, I get silence from K-LOVE, Operation Warm, WAY-FM and Feed the Hungry. Sometimes when the programs are described, the language gets tortured and odd. For instance according to this WAY-FM description, the food is given in the “honor” of the WAY-FM donor.

Thanks for your special investment to ensure WAY-FM’s critical year-end funding need is met. And with every $100 you invest in WAY-FM, ministry partner Feed The Hungry will provide a month of food this Christmas season to a child fleeing war-torn South Sudan. Multiples of $100 count too. Your gift of $200 feeds 2 refugee children, and your $500 covers 5 children. 100% of your investment stays with WAY-FM, as Feed The Hungry makes these meals possible in your honor!

How does giving to a radio station warrant a donor being honored for what Feed the Hungry does? Somehow I get to feel special for what someone does? This language is very similar to the K-LOVE/Operation Warm coat promo. Operation Warm’s spokesman told me the coats are given to cold kids in honor of K-LOVE donors who give $40/month.
How Can This Stop?
Donors will have to speak up. I have raised these concerns to both K-LOVE and WAY-FM and they have done nothing. Apparently, it works too well. Christian music artists haven’t spoken up as far as I can tell but they should.
I have spoken to several industry insiders who acknowledge the scandalous deception but are afraid to speak up because of the market power of the big three networks. To say something would compromise their livelihood. I get that.
In addition to voting with our dollars, donors are going to have to speak out for this to change. And donors should stop making contingent challenges.** Just give cheerfully and let your yes be yes.
Still not convinced? Here is another suggestion for those who want to support a radio station and give money to the needy.
Do both.
Let’s take WAY-FM and Feed the Hungry as an example.
You could give $40 to WAY-FM and $60 to Feed the Hungry. You would be helping the station and feeding 10 hungry kids for a month. See how that works?
Personally, I don’t like the deception so I give elsewhere. However, if you aren’t convinced these groups being deceptive, consider another way. Radio executives might have to take a pay freeze but more coats and food will be given.
 
*According to Feed the Hungry’s website, it takes $6 to feed a refugee child for a month. WAY-FM sent this email announcing the goal to supporters:

There’s still time to help reach your WAY-FM’s $100,000 Pledge Drive Launch Goal and realize the dream of feeding 1,000 hungry refugee kids this Christmas season.
Your gift by midnight tonight will help give your WAY-FM a solid start to the Year-End Pledge Drive – so that together, we can impact even more people who desperately need the hope of Jesus in 2017!
And remember, with your investment of $100 or more, WAY-FM’s ministry partner, Feed The Hungry, will provide a month’s worth of lifesaving meals to a child fleeing war-torn South Sudan.
So I’m praying you’ll invest generously now to encourage listeners and help feed 1,000 hungry kids this Christmas season!

 
**I do think challenging groups to participate is fine, e.g., I gave $100, now I challenge all guitar players to give at least $100 to the food bank. According to this WAY-FM description, the food is given in “the honor” of the WAY-FM donor.

Thanks for your special investment to ensure WAY-FM’s critical year-end funding need is met. And with every $100 you invest in WAY-FM, ministry partner Feed The Hungry will provide a month of food this Christmas season to a child fleeing war-torn South Sudan. Multiples of $100 count too. Your gift of $200 feeds 2 refugee children, and your $500 covers 5 children. 100% of your investment stays with WAY-FM, as Feed The Hungry makes these meals possible in your honor!

Donor Illusion: Giving Money to The WAY-FM Doesn't Feed a Hungry Sudanese Child for a Month

Listening to The WAY-FM this morning I heard the DJ say that if I gave $100 toward The WAY’s fund drive, a South Sudanese refugee child would get food for a month. The website provided more information:
WAY FTH
Clicking through this picture, I found a video about a child named Violet and the claim written in bold print:

It’s the perfect time to partner with Feed the Hungry for WAY-FM’s Year-End Pledge Drive. Every gift of $100 not only keeps the ministry of WAY-FM going, but also provides a month of hot meals to these refugee kids – just in time for the Christmas season!

Just in time for the Christmas season, I wrote to WAY-FM and then called the donor phone number to ask how my $100 could keep WAY-FM on the air and feed a hungry refugee child for a month.  After my second attempt, a wonderful young woman told me that WAY-FM is partnering with Feed the Hungry and that Feed the Hungry’s food would be “unlocked” by my donation. She assured me that 100% of the $100 would stay with WAY-FM to keep them on the air. She told me they call it “unlocking a door” when a listener donated the requisite funds.
All I could envision was a bunch of locked rooms with food inside and hungry children outside waiting for an American Christian to send $100 to WAY-FM. A month of food held hostage waiting for the $100 ransom.
Later I learned that this arrangement between WAY-FM and Feed the Hungry is similar to K-LOVE’s and Operation Warm’s coat donor illusion.
In an email, a representative from WAY-FM very candidly explained that Feed the Hungry wasn’t withholding food while waiting for WAY-FM donors to give $100.  I was informed that the partnership was about mutual benefit and that Feed the Hungry just wanted WAY-FM listeners to feel a part of it.
So bottom line, the $100 helps WAY-FM and doesn’t “provide a month of hot meals to these refugee kids.”
One moral of the story is: If you want to help hungry kids or provide a warm coat, don’t give a donation to a radio station.
Wouldn’t it be really revolutionary if a DJ said during a pledge drive: “Hey, we need money to play music on the radio. If you like what we do, how about donating some cash to help us out?” It would be mind blowing if tomorrow WAY-FM DJs said, “Hey we’re sorry about linking the donation with the month of food for a third world child. Feed the Hungry is going to give that food anyway. We wanted some mutual promotion because both groups are doing really good things for the Kingdom. But we at WAY-FM do need your donations to keep playing music and we encourage you to give to us and Feed the Hungry.”
I would probably give to a station like that. I think a lot of people would because they would just want to reward the honesty — just in time for the Christmas season when we celebrate the birth of the guy we are supposed to be imitating.

#GivingTuesday: Donor Illusions

Although dated, I have found this 2009 article on donor illusions to be helpful.  The article was published on the blog of the Give Well organization, a donor support group. Give Well publishes a recommended charity list each year. Here is 2016’s list.
The Give Well description of donor illusions focuses on international charities but illusions can be found in domestic charities as well (e.g., today’s post on coats for pledges at K-LOVE).

As a result, international charities tend to create “donor illusions” by implying that donations can be attributed more tangibly, reliably and specifically than they really are. Some charities are more purposefully misleading than others, and some have more prominent and clear disclosures than others, but we feel that all of the cases below end up misleading many donors.

The illusions illustrated in the post include loans to third world entrepreneurs, child sponsorship, and giving livestock to needy families.
Livestock Gifts
I have written about these in previous years as being a good example of a compelling illusion. Donors can easily sell the idea of giving an animal to a third world family to Sunday school classes or church groups. The marketing certainly creates that illusion. Check out World Vision’s 2016 catalog.
WorldVision 2016 goat
Here is what World Vision says about the gifts in the new Christmas catalog.
world vision fine print 2016
In other words, your donation will be used where “it is needed most.”
Church Illusions
Other illusions I have covered include Mars Hill Church’s promotion of Ethiopian pastors via Mars Hill Global. In fact, most of the money donated to Mars Hill Global went to expand the Mars Hill Church video locations in the United States.
Gospel for Asia for years told donors that 100% of donations went to “the field.” The illusion was created that poor church planters and Asian children were getting most of the donations. However, we have since learned that Gospel for Asia’s Texas leadership sent millions to Believers’ Church in India, also controlled by GFA founder K.P. Yohannan to build state of the art for profit schools and medical centers. While a small percentage of the money went to evangelism and helping the poor, much of it went to projects designed to make Believers’ church self-sustaining and a large portion went to India and then back to Texas to help build GFA’s state of the art headquarters.
Today, I wrote about K-LOVE’s claim that a $40/month donation to K-LOVE provides a warm winter coat to a needy child. The only reason that claim might technically be true is because K-LOVE and Operation Warm set up an artificial scheme to tie coat distributions to pledges. K-LOVE holds captive coats from Operation Warm and tells prospective donors we will give a coat if you pledge. What K-LOVE doesn’t tell donors is that the coat will be given to a child anyway, pledge or no pledge.
Do Donors Want Illusions?
Tim Ogden at the Philanthropy Action blog says they do:

David Roodman pointed me to a typical reaction post to the Kiva story. In summary, the authors lament the lack of direct connection to a specific person they can give to and wonder why they can’t just dispense with the intermediaries.
I think the post is quite revelatory about why so many charities create the illusion of direct connection. They do so because donors demand it.
The demand for direct connection is baffling to me since most donors absolutely refuse direct connection to the people in need that are closest to them. Consider: how often do you or your friends take advantage of the opportunity to give directly and establish a connection by giving $20 to the guy standing at the corner with the cardboard sign saying, “Will Work for Food”?
I’ll bet the answer is “never.“ And there’s a very good reason for that. You believe that to actually help that person you should give the money to a knowledgeable intermediary like a homeless shelter that will do the research to understand this person’s situation, and ensure the money you give is actually used in a responsible way.
So if you would only give to an intermediary in order to help someone on the street outside your home, why do you want to do away with intermediaries between you and a person on the other side of the world whose circumstances you don’t understand at all?
I just don’t get it.
In the end I guess the donor demand really is for an illusion. They don’t just want connection—what they want is the illusion of connection where they can feel directly connected but not actually have to be directly connected—with all the messiness that such connections would entail—to people in need.

This somewhat cynical explanation for the persistence of illusions doesn’t quite fit for me. As I have learned that charities are using subterfuge to raise money, my reaction has been anger. I want the nuance. I want to know what they are doing with the money.
Guilt Illusions
I am sad and angry that K-LOVE artificially creates guilt in their listeners. I know people who agonize over how much to give to K-LOVE “to keep them on the air.” When K-LOVE’s well-paid on-air personalities top off their appeals with the promise that the $40/month will trigger a coat for a needy kid, that tips the scale toward a pledge, even though the family income really can’t absorb that level of giving. It should keep K-LOVE executives up at night that their Christian brothers and sisters are denying their children and themselves basics so that they can get a quarter of a million per year (the CEO made nearly $600,000 in FY 2015).
On this #GivingTuesday, give to those you have investigated. Give locally. By all means, give a needy person a coat, but do it yourself, or through a local group who is locally accountable.