There are television programs that before airing will as a matter of courtesy, information, or broadcast modus operandi, provide a warning to the audience that the following content may not be suitable for younger audiences because of mature content, or violent images, or strong language, or various other reasons. Therefore, these warnings are perhaps a last chance for parental authority to change the channel to something less controversial or more desirable.
Then there are warnings that pretty much are nonsensical or even annoying in the sense of misplacement of such a warning. For example, a warning in front of a religious program, in which the preacher of such, is about as innocuous, about as upbeat, about as positive, as a person can be, in which one broadcaster displays a warning that the following program is not endorsed by the broadcaster, nor expresses the viewpoints or reflects the sentiments of the broadcaster which is okay for what it is worth, but then follows this with the temerity to add that the following views are not endorsed by any of its employees, which would imply, or actually states, that none of their employees are Christian, or have Christian sentiments, or endorse Christian ideas, as if, Christianity is some sort of unmitigated evil.
It would be one thing, if the broadcaster, for whatever reason, stated their viewpoint and left it at that, but it's an entirely different thing, for a broadcaster to basically aggregate onto itself, what its employees are or are not, especially if what they are stating isn't even true, that is to say, that at least some of the employees are, in fact, Christian or have Christian sentiments. Additionally, the warning seems quite misplaced, especially if America has degenerated into a country in which some broadcasters, or at least one broadcaster, believes that Christian sentiments such as love, grace, graciousness, charity, and so forth, are somehow something to be avoided like the plague.
While America has striven hard to become more inclusive, it is an entirely different thing to take positive attributes, and disavow oneself of them, solely because they are associated with a particular religion, but not exclusive to that religion. The mistake being made, is to take religion, as something that should just be shut inside a church, or a building, as if, human beings should only express religious sentiments in private, as if somehow to speak of their faith, or to act in accordance with their faith, is inimical to civil and secular society.
If broadcasters truly believe that they should warn patrons over the watching of wholesome programs, than one might ask as to what they aren't going to warn against. There was a time when it was considered to be good stewardship to encourage Christian values, and if today those Christian values should instead be hidden like a lamp inside a closet, how far the mighty have fallen, and if those that use to be the beacons of the proverbial hill, have turned those beacons off, how mighty their fall shall be