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Think about it: Is the FCC protecting us from indecency
or is this censorship in sheep's clothing?
Delays, Low Fines Weaken FCC Attack on Indecency
By Frank Ahrens
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, November 10, 2005; A01
On the morning of June 3, 1996, Howard Stern hosted an explicit
discussion between adult-film star Jenna Jameson and her father on a
nationally syndicated radio show, broadcast to more than 10 million
listeners.
It didn't take long for the conversation to go from tasteless to
downright vulgar.
The Federal Communications Commission, under Democratic Chairman Reed E.
Hundt, took one year to determine that the radio routine violated the
agency's indecency regulations. But nearly four years and two FCC
chairmen later, in February 2001, the $6,000 fine was rescinded "due to
passage of time," FCC records note.
The FCC's actions were hardly an aberration. A Washington Post analysis
of all 92 known proposed indecency fines shows that the agency's record
of policing the airwaves has been undermined by plodding investigations,
insufficient fine amounts and inconsistent follow-up.
The agency's role as broadcast nanny has come under greater scrutiny in
recent months as consumers and lawmakers grow concerned about the
increasingly coarse content of radio and television -- last year, the
FCC received more than 1 million complaints about programs. Broadcasters
say the FCC's content guidelines are too tough and arbitrarily applied
while some lawmakers, viewers and interest groups blame the agency for
being too lax.
The issue has even split FCC officials serving on the same commission,
hindering the process.
Some chairmen made it a priority to collect fines; others let the
penalties languish until the agency's five-year statute of limitations
voided them. None of the chairmen was quick about it. The record shows
that an average of 16 months passes from the broadcast date of an
incident to the issuance of an indecency ruling. One case took 56 months
to resolve.
The FCC is preparing to release a wave of backlogged decisions in the
next few weeks after nearly a year of silence, and agency officials
promise that the process will speed up.
"I am concerned by the length of time it historically has taken for the
commission to act on a complaint," said Kevin J. Martin, a Republican
who became chairman in March. "Since I became chairman, we have been
working to develop a process to reduce that time frame."
The process can drag on because of the time it takes to secure tapes and
transcripts from broadcasters and the lengthy legal wrangling that can
ensue. But slow-footed investigations have not been the agency's only
problem.
The size of the fines appears to have had little lasting deterrent value
for giant media conglomerates that collect hundreds of millions of
dollars in profits. For instance, just one year before the Stern
broadcast with the Jamesons, Stern's boss -- Infinity Broadcasting Corp.
-- paid $1.7 million to settle multiple indecency rulings against the
shock jock.
Part of the problem, the agency says, is that fines are too low -- a
maximum of $32,500. If broadcasters refuse to pay, the cases are turned
over for enforcement to the Department of Justice, which has little
incentive to pursue such small fines, members of Congress have said. Of
four proposed fines turned over to the department, it collected two and
refused to pursue two.
Moreover, the FCC typically has allowed broadcasters to pay fines
without admitting a violation of indecency rules. Thus, when a
broadcaster's license comes up for renewal, it contains no record of
indecency violations that could be used to block renewal.
In more recent cases, the FCC has compelled some broadcasters to admit
wrongdoing. But those acknowledgments are accompanied by language in the
consent decrees that states the admissions cannot be used against the
broadcasters in any way, say broadcasters familiar with the deals.
Even with these shortcomings, Republican Michael K. Powell, who resigned
as FCC chairman in March, argued that the agency under his leadership
had an impact on indecency. He cited the decision by many broadcasters
to impose "no tolerance" rules on on-air talent. The key, Powell said,
is raising the political heat on broadcasters and threatening them with
the prospect of higher fines.
"No Washington office head wants to bring their CEO before a
congressional panel and be grilled for a full day" on indecency, Powell
said.
The FCC has struggled to balance First Amendment rights with laws that
forbid over-the-air radio or television broadcasting between 6 a.m. and
10 p.m. of "patently offensive" material of a sexual or excretory
nature. The courts have not helped much, as the guiding 1978 indecency
statute is increasingly irrelevant in an era of 200 unpoliced cable and
satellite channels that do not fall under the law.
Some groups say the government should no longer monitor the nation's
airwaves because technology -- such as the V-chip and cable and
satellite blocking systems -- allows parents to determine what their
children watch.
"We're hoping that regulators, lawmakers and the American public come to
the same conclusion we have, that the system is broken," said James
Dyke, executive director of Television Watch, a coalition that includes
most major television networks, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, some
politically conservative organizations and First Amendment academics.
"The first step is realizing that the system is outdated and can easily
be hijacked by a very few, if not one individual," he said.
Dyke's reference is to the Parents Television Council, which flooded the
FCC with complaints last year. Like the broadcasters, the PTC would
prefer the government stay out of regulating content. "But because there
is a law and the law seems to be very openly disregarded by the networks
so frequently, our only recourse is to go to the congressionally
mandated watchdog -- the FCC," said Tim Winter, a former NBC executive
who is now the PTC's executive director.
The PTC supports clearer guidelines about what is and is not indecent,
Winter said. The FCC has maintained such guidelines would amount to
prior restraint of free speech -- a constitutional problem.
What seemed shocking 12 years ago -- tastefully shadowed partial nudity
on ABC's "NYPD Blue" -- seems quaint today compared with more recent
shows that have drawn fines, such as a Fox television show that featured
whipped-cream-covered strippers or an Infinity radio broadcast that
included a couple purportedly having sex in New York's St. Patrick's
Cathedral.
Jeffrey H. Smulyan, chairman of Emmis Communications Corp., which owns
more than 40 radio and television stations and has been hit with $42,000
in proposed fines over the past four years, said the indecency standard
is a moving line, one shifting in a more conservative direction.
"It makes it difficult to know what's acceptable in 21st-century
America," Smulyan said. "From a broadcaster's standpoint, what was fine
yesterday is now clearly indecent today. Unless there are some
guidelines, it's impossible to police."
Emmis is settling its indecency fines.
Concerns over broadcast indecency crested in February 2003 when singer
Janet Jackson's breast was exposed during a Super Bowl halftime show,
leading lawmakers to call for higher fines and extend the FCC's
authority to cable and satellite channels. In February, the House passed
a bill that would raise the maximum fine to $500,000 and require a
license-revocation hearing after a broadcaster's third offense. A
similar bill waits in the Senate.
The FCC has collected most of the fines it has imposed. But the long
turnaround time has allowed some broadcasters to outwait the agency.
An example: During an August 1987 morning show on Chicago rock
powerhouse WLUP, deejays Steve Dahl and Garry Meier talked to a caller
who offered a gay-themed song called "Kiddie Porn."
More than two years passed before the FCC, under Republican Chairman
Alfred E. Sikes, proposed a $6,000 indecency fine.
The station's owner, Evergreen Media Corp., through its Washington law
firm, Latham & Watkins, decided to appeal. "Our licenses were so
valuable, we had to defend them," said James de Castro, president of
Evergreen at the time.
As part of its defense, Evergreen argued that community standards had
relaxed in the two years since the broadcast, suggesting that if "Kiddie
Porn" was indecent in 1987, it no longer was in 1989. The company
appealed to the courts, with the Department of Justice prosecuting the
FCC's case.
It eventually landed in Chicago district court. As Latham lawyer Eric L.
Bernthal recalled it, the judge said, " U.S. v. Evergreen . What is
this, a drug case?"
"After I explained it was an indecency case, he basically looked over
his glasses and said, 'You're kidding, right?' " By that time, the FCC
had slapped Evergreen with an additional $33,750 in fines. Back in
Washington, Bernthal persuaded the FCC to settle all the fines with no
admission of guilt on Evergreen's behalf, to drop other complaints
against the company that the FCC was investigating and to craft a set of
decency guidelines for broadcasters, all in exchange for a $10,000
"voluntary contribution" to the U.S. Treasury.
Staff researcher Sarah Cohen contributed to this report.
© 2005 The Washington Post Company
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