A Man on a Mission, Not a Pedestal.
The story behind 647 — and the famine of truth that started it all.
A drop from God. A microphone. Every morning at 7.
Chuck Frank didn't plan to become a daily news commentator. A former CEO, Associate Dean, and Pastor, he was deep in Bible study when the calling came — what he describes as "a drop from God." The message was clear: there is a famine of truth in our land. Do something about it.
That was the birth of 647. Six stories, every morning at seven. No sponsors, no corporate backing, no agenda except truth. 800+ videos later, Chuck's still at the microphone — not for fame, not for money, but because somebody has to tell the truth. And if people throw things at him for it, well, that's a risk he's willing to take.
What 647 stands for.
Truth. Justice. The American Way. In Chuck's own words.
Truth
"Truth, because it comes from God. And I believe in an absolute truth."
We start with the facts, in plain English. Then — clearly labeled — comes the opinion. Never the other way around.
Justice
"Justice, because there is so little of it where politicians are concerned."
Equal weight, equal scrutiny. Power that escapes accountability is the story we tell loudest.
The American Way
"The way of small government. The way of righteous people working together."
A classical, civic patriotism — not partisan slogans. Neighbors before parties.
There is a famine of truth in our land.
647 covers a wide aperture on purpose — politics, faith, science, culture — because the famine touches every corner. The discipline is the same in every story: fact first, plainly stated, with opinion clearly labeled afterward.
"Here's the truth. Now here's my opinion. You decide."
How it all fits together.
Most folks start with the daily show. Some end up at Bible study. The path is yours; no pressure either way.
Six stories every morning at 7.
Test what stuck. Win bragging rights.
Simple stories. Timeless wisdom. On Trust and Obey.
Bible study for those ready to go further.
Start your morning with truth.
Free. Every weekday. Plain English.