RELIGIOUS BROADCASTERS PUT FAITH IN JVC's D-9
Support Continues to Grow for 4:2:2 Format

Wayne, New Jersey (July 13, 1998) - JVC PROFESSIONAL 
PRODUCTS COMPANY announced that three more religious broadcasters 
have joined the growing D-9 family. D-9, JVC's renowned 
4:2:2 digital format, continues to make strong in-roads in major 
religious markets throughout the United States. Word of Life, First 
Baptist Church, and Son of Man's Mission are some of the latest 
users to embrace the cost-effective, high-quality equipment.

WORD OF LIFE, ST. JOSEPH, MO
Word of Life broadcasts its Charismatic church services to 11 
million viewers in 12 major markets throughout the United State and 
Hawaii on the All American Network. Recently, the church made major 
changes - it migrated to a digital format and made the economical 
choice to purchase JVC's D-9 rather than continue to rent 
Sony 3-chip analog equipment.

"Our decision to buy rather than continue renting was cost-based. 
It made more sense for us to purchase more equipment rather than 
continue to rent," said Associate Pastor Jimmy Bratcher, who heads 
Word of Life's video department. "We chose D-9 because it was 
the best and most reliable digital format we could find."

The church purchased one D-9 BR-D40 Dockable Recorder; one 
D-9 BR-D750 Editor and three JVC KY-D29 Cameras. Word of Life 
has immediate plans to purchase a fourth JVC KY-D29 Camera for 
acquisition. Word of Life uses D-9 to shoot church services 
and to create in-service announcements and product spots for its 
congregation of 3,000 and its millions of viewers nationwide.

"D-9 is a much better quality than what we were using. The 
sharpness of the image is better and the resolution of the picture 
is phenomenal. Plus, it's easy to use and there was no learning 
curve," Bratcher said. "So far, I've heard several comments from 
people in the church, who have no knowledge of video technology, 
but who have come to me to say the programming looks so much 
better. It's thrilled me."

FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH, SPRINGDALE, ARK.
For 128 years the First Baptist Church has called Northwest 
Arkansas home. Located in the nation's Bible belt, the church 
property was once a cow pasture. Now, the property is located in 
the 11th fastest growing region in the United States and certainly 
not immune to the sweeping technological change stirring today's 
broadcast markets.

For the last five years, First Baptist Church has broadcast its 
church services nationally on FamilyNet and the Odyssey Channel, 
two religious cable networks. Recently, First Baptist made the 
decision, like many other religious broadcasters, to migrate to 
digital. First Baptist's first digital step was the recent purchase 
of JVC's D-9 BR-D40 Recorder and a JVC KY-D29 Camera.

"Our goal is to change to a digital format and migrate away from 
being 100 percent analog Beta SP," said Chris Chapman, First 
Baptist's Minister of Media and Worship Associate. Chapman said 
First Baptist has earmarked funds to add two BR-D85 Editing 
Recorders with Pre-Read and four more JVC cameras to create a 
hybrid analog/digital system based in D-9.

First Baptist uses its BR-D40 and KY-D29 combination to shoot video 
features shown to nearly 4,000 Sunday churchgoers and later 
broadcast along with church services to national markets via cable. 
Chapman explained that 10 foot by 13 foot screens in the worship 
center show feature videos shot using D-9 in the field that 
relay stories about congregation members finding Christ. Church 
video announcements and a video segment entitled "Around the 
Ministry in a Minute," are also shown to the congregation and 
recorded in First Baptist's studio using D-9.

First Baptist has heavily used its D-9 equipment over the 
past four months. "I like it better and I don't get the same 
glitches I do with Beta. The sharpness we get from D-9 
definitely makes a difference," Chapman said.

"And, for the applications we have here, D-9 was the economic 
choice," Chapman continued. "We didn't have the money to go to 
Digital BetaCam and 4:1:1 DV formats weren't even considered. 
D-9 is 4:2:2 sampling with a 1/2-inch tape format which I 
believe is more robust and dependable compared to the competition's 
thin little 6 mm tape."

Chapman said he knew he made the right decision, "Once I got 
D-9 into my facility and started using it. I realized then 
that not only was the picture quality much sharper than my old 
Beta, but the value was really tremendous. I would recommend 
D-9 to anybody wanting a strong economical digital format."

SON OF MAN'S MISSION, BREMARTON, WA
An interdenominational foreign mission, the Son of Man's Mission 
has for more than 20 years produced documentaries, Christian 
television programs and educational videos for South American 
viewers in Chile. 

Director Jim Thurston, who lives in Santiago, Chile has produced 
videos for Son of Man's Mission since 1976 and most recently 
ascribed to JVC's S-VHS format. Six months ago, Thurston made the 
decision to go digital and sought out JVC's D-9, a digital 
videotape format backwardly compatible with S-VHS that would also 
deliver the picture clarity he sought.

"I just really liked the D-9 standard of 4:2:2 processing and 
mild 3.3:1 compression, and the price was right," Thurston said. 
"Plus, the fact that D-9 machines can run S-VHS was a big 
factor. I hated to think that I would have to abandon my library of 
older tapes if I chose a digital format other than D-9."

After seeing D-9 equipment demonstrated at NAB98, Thurston 
purchased a D-9 BR-D40 Dockable Recorder, two D-9 BR-
D51 Players with S-VHS Playback; a D-9 BR-D750 Editor, and 
two JVC KY-D29 Cameras.

D-9 will be used to record and produce religious television 
programs aired to 15 million viewers in Chile. The format also will 
be used to create documentaries and religious videos for Chilean 
schoolchildren, who by government mandate must receive religious 
education. Thurston also has plans to feed live D-9 tape over 
Son of Man's developing Internet site at www.intervizion.org.

"This is really a very exciting time for us," Thurston said. "We 
are committed to continuing the digital migration with the hope 
that we will also archive and dub our hundreds of old tapes on 
D-9," Thurston said.

JVC PROFESSIONAL PRODUCTS COMPANY, headquartered in Wayne, 
New Jersey, distributes a complete line of broadcast and 
professional equipment including cameras, recorders and editing 
products. For more information about D-9 or any other JVC 
equipment, contact David Walton at 1-800-JVC-5825, or visit the 
JVC web site at www.jvc.com/pro.