A proposal to change federal policy on broadcast indecency
is denounced by tens of thousands of American viewers, but it is supported by
industry leaders who want to see the “zero-tolerance” policy jettisoned,
according to The Washington Times.
The tug of war over the Federal Communications Commission
policy is not expected to be addressed until after a new FCC chairman and
commission member are installed later this year.
But a comment period for the proposal — which ended Friday
and collected more than 102,000 responses — showed the deep revulsion many
Americans have for vulgarity, profanity and crassness, especially in television
programming.
“The FCC asked for the public’s comment and they got it,”
said Tim Winter, president of the Parents Television Council, a watchdog group
for entertainment media. “By a margin of nearly 1,000 to 1, the American public
told the FCC to enforce existing broadcast indecency law and not to weaken it,”
he said.
Industry leaders, however, asked the FCC to revise their
policy.
But during and after the April bombing attack at the Boston
Marathon, it was “virtually impossible to report on this unfolding story without
the real danger of profanity ending up on the air,” Mr. Kravetz said, adding
that fear of hefty fines affected the staff’s news reporting.
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