Cable Company Goes TBN 24/7 for Delinquent Customers
- Posted on July 13, 2007
- Viewed 177 times
- (3) comments
But recently Cable Pro president, Larry Maezell experimented with a new idea that has so far been very successful. Now, instead of canceling a person’s service, or sending him or her repeated notices of delinquency, Cable Pro simply changes a customer’s subscription preferences resulting in his or her service becoming 24 hours of the Trinity Broadcasting Network on every channel.
“It’s worked beautifully” said Maezell. “In the past we’d have to try and try to get in touch with the people who weren’t paying, try and get our man out there to cut off their service. It was just a big hassle. Now, they call us!”
Cable Pro customer Chris Kjos was one of the first to experience Cable Pro’s new policy…
More on this (and other great news) at TomintheBox...
Yet more breaking news from TomintheBox... Cable Pro of Knoxville has for years had to put man hours and money into the problem of cable company clients who were delinquent in their payments. The practice has traditionally been that cable customers who persisted in not paying their bills would, after three notices, have their cable service cut off until their account was settled. While this practice has been successful in rooting out non-paying customers, it still costs the company an estimated $60,000 per year in lost time, and man hours. But recently Cable Pro president, Larry Maezell experimented with a new idea that has so far been very successful. Now, instead of canceling a person's service, or sending him or her repeated notices of delinquency, Cable Pro simply changes a customer's subscription preferences resulting in his or her service becoming 24 hours of the Trinity Broadcasting Network on every channel...
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P. Consuela on Fri, July 13, 2007
hahahahahahahahahaha!
someone will actually get saved because of this.
but hahahahahahahahaha!
TBN is punishment.
Kevin on Mon, July 16, 2007
Todd,
The copy-and-paste you did has repetitions in it from the Tominthebox article.
Just thought you’d want to know.
You can delete this post at anytime!
Kevin
Not A Monk on Thu, September 06, 2007
I’m very concerned…Isn’t forcing a person to watch TBN 24/7 against the Geneva Convention?!? Has anyone really ever even watched it that long and lived to tell about it?!?!
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