A Cloistered Nun, a Garage, and $200: How Mother Angelica Built the Largest Religious Media Network on Earth
What happens when a cloistered Poor Clare nun with no broadcasting experience, no money, and a bum leg decides to take on the secular media establishment—armed with nothing but a rosary and an iron will?
Meet EWTN (Eternal Word Television Network)—the largest religious media network in the world, reaching over 380 million television households in more than 150 countries, broadcasting 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, in multiple languages. It is headquartered not in New York or Los Angeles, but in Irondale, Alabama, a small town just outside Birmingham. And it all started with a woman the world never expected to see on television.
The Nun Who Changed Everything
Rita Antoinette Rizzo was born on April 20, 1923, in Canton, Ohio, into a family fractured by poverty and divorce. Her childhood was marked by suffering—her parents separated when she was young, and she and her mother moved constantly, often struggling to make ends meet. As a young woman, Rita suffered a severe injury at work that left her needing a leg brace and walking with difficulty for the rest of her life.
But suffering, as any saint will tell you, has a way of opening doors that comfort keeps shut.
Rita entered the Poor Clares of Perpetual Adoration in 1944 and took the name Sister Mary Angelica of the Annunciation. Over the following decades, she founded a new monastery in Irondale, Alabama—Our Lady of the Angels Monastery—in 1962. She began writing and printing small pamphlets and booklets about the faith, distributing them to anyone who would read them. She had a gift for translating the deep truths of Catholicism into plain, direct language that ordinary people could understand.
Then came the moment that changed everything.
From a Garage to Global Broadcasting
In 1978, Mother Angelica appeared on a local television program in Chicago. During a taping, she witnessed something that troubled her deeply—a portrayal of the faith she felt was misleading and disrespectful. Rather than simply complain, she made a decision that stunned everyone around her: she would start her own television network.
She had no broadcasting experience. She had no investors. She had roughly $200 in the bank.
On August 15, 1981—the Feast of the Assumption of Mary—EWTN went live from a converted garage on the grounds of her monastery in Irondale. The first broadcast reached a handful of homes via satellite. Mother Angelica herself hosted the flagship program, Mother Angelica Live, speaking directly to the camera with a warmth, humor, and bluntness that audiences had never seen from a religious figure—let alone a nun in a full habit.
She famously said she would rather blow up the network than let it be taken from the mission she had built it for. She meant it.
A Media Empire Built on Faith
What began in that garage is now a global media operation of staggering scale. EWTN today encompasses:
- EWTN Television — 24/7 Catholic programming broadcast via satellite and cable to over 380 million households in more than 150 countries
- EWTN Radio — A global Catholic radio network carried on hundreds of AM and FM affiliates and shortwave frequencies worldwide
- EWTN News — The Catholic News Agency (CNA) and the National Catholic Register, providing daily journalism from a Catholic perspective
- EWTN Publishing — Books, devotionals, and educational materials
- EWTN.com — One of the most visited Catholic websites in the world, with streaming video, audio archives, and an extensive library of Catholic teaching
The network broadcasts in English, Spanish, French, German, and other languages. It covers papal events live from Rome. It produces original series on Scripture, theology, Church history, and the lives of the saints. It airs the Holy Mass daily.
All of this from a monastery in small-town Alabama.
Mother Angelica's Legacy
Mother Angelica suffered a severe stroke on Christmas Eve 1991 but returned to broadcasting. She suffered another major stroke in 2001 that left her largely unable to speak, and she withdrew from public life. She spent her final years in prayer at the monastery she had founded, surrounded by her community of sisters.
Mother Angelica died on Easter Sunday, March 27, 2016. She was 92 years old.
Her passing was mourned by millions around the world—Catholics and non-Catholics alike—who had been touched by her no-nonsense faith and her remarkable courage. The network she built continues without her, now led by a dedicated team committed to carrying forward her mission.
Her cause for canonization was formally opened in 2024, and she now holds the title Servant of God.
What Makes EWTN Unique
EWTN is not simply a television channel that happens to be Catholic. It is a comprehensive Catholic media apostolate—a ministry that uses every available platform to bring the fullness of the Catholic faith into homes, cars, offices, and phones around the world. It is:
- Faithful to the Magisterium — EWTN is unapologetically orthodox in its Catholic identity
- Global in reach — Programming in multiple languages across every continent
- Free to viewers — Supported primarily by viewer donations, not advertising revenue
- Multi-platform — Television, radio, print, digital, and social media
No other religious media organization in the world operates at this scale.
Why This Matters
There is no replacement for EWTN. If this network disappeared tomorrow, millions of homebound Catholics would lose daily access to the Holy Mass. Parishes in 150 countries would lose a faithful source of catechesis and news. The Catholic News Agency and National Catholic Register -- two of the few remaining outlets covering the Church with both journalistic rigor and fidelity to the Magisterium -- would lose their institutional home. What Mother Angelica built from a garage in Irondale with $200 and a rosary is now the single largest infrastructure for Catholic media on earth, and nothing in the secular or Catholic world is positioned to replace it.
How You Can Support
- Watch and listen — Tune in to EWTN on television, radio, or streaming at ewtn.com
- Donate — EWTN is viewer-supported. Every contribution keeps Catholic programming on the air
- Subscribe to EWTN News — Follow the National Catholic Register and CNA for faithful Catholic journalism
- Share the network — Tell a friend, a family member, or a parish group about EWTN
- Pray — Mother Angelica always said prayer was the foundation. Pray for the network and its mission
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What role has EWTN played in your faith journey? Do you remember the first time you watched Mother Angelica? Tell us in the comments.
EWTN (Eternal Word Television Network)
- Website: ewtn.com
- Television: Available on major cable and satellite providers nationwide
- Radio: Find a local affiliate at ewtn.com/radio
- News: catholicnewsagency.com | ncregister.com
- Location: 5817 Old Leeds Road, Irondale, AL 35210
- Social Media: Facebook, X, YouTube, Instagram — search @EWTN
- DCB Listing: Find EWTN on Discover Catholic Business
Sources: EWTN Official Website, EWTN About Page, National Catholic Register