Tuesday June 5, 8:05 AM
US court rejects FCC broadcast decency limit
(Note strong language in paragraphs 4, 6. Adds analyst in
paragraph 8)
By Martha Graybow
NEW YORK, June 4 (Reuters) - In a major victory for TV
networks, a U.S. appeals court on Monday overruled federal
regulators who decided that expletives uttered on broadcast
television violated decency standards.
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit in New
York, in a divided decision, said that the U.S. Federal
Communications Commission was "arbitrary and capricious" in
setting a new standard for defining indecency.
The court sent the matter back to the commission for
further proceedings to clarify its indecency policy. The FCC,
which said it was still studying the opinion, could decide to
ask the U.S. Supreme Court to reverse the appeals court.
The FCC ruled in March 2006 ruling that News Corp.'s
Fox television network had violated decency rules when
singer Cher blurted "fuck" during the 2002 Billboard Music
Awards broadcast and actress Nicole Richie used a variation of
that word and "shit" during the 2003 awards.
No fines were imposed but Fox had challenged the decision
to the appeals court, arguing that the government's decency
standard was unclear, violated free speech protections and that
the rulings had contradicted findings in past cases.
Republican FCC Chairman Kevin Martin angrily retorted that
he found it "hard to believe that the New York court would tell
American families that 'shit' and 'fuck' are fine to say on
broadcast television during the hours when children are most
likely to be in the audience."
"If we can't restrict the use (of the two obscenities)
during prime time, Hollywood will be able to say anything they
want, whenever they want," Martin said in a statement.
Paul Gallant, an analyst at Stanford Washington Research
Group, said the FCC's indecency regulations would likely end up
before the high court. "This does seem to have 'Supreme Court'
written all over it," Gallant said.
Martin was silent on a Supreme Court appeal, though Senate
Commerce Committee Chairman Daniel Inouye, a Hawaii Democrat,
and the Parents Television Council urged the FCC to appeal.
The stakes are high for broadcasters who could face fines
of up to $325,000 per violation.
FLEETING EXPLETIVES INDECENT?
The three-member appeals panel focused on whether
expletives were used repeatedly or were only uttered
fleetingly. The FCC had argued that, under certain conditions,
one utterance can violate the decency standard.
"We find that the FCC's new policy regarding 'fleeting
expletives' represents a significant departure from positions
previously taken by the agency and relied on by the broadcast
industry," Judge Rosemary Pooler wrote for herself and Judge
Peter Hall in the majority decision.
"We further find that the FCC has failed to articulate a
reasoned basis for this change in policy," the ruling said.
"Accordingly, we hold that the FCC's new policy regarding
'fleeting expletives' is arbitrary and capricious."
The court did not rule on constitutional challenges to the
FCC's policy. But the majority of the judges suggested it could
be tough for the commission to prevail on constitutional
grounds.
"We are skeptical that the commission can provide a
reasoned explanation for its 'fleeting expletive' regime that
would pass constitutional muster," the majority wrote.
Judge Pierre Leval dissented, writing that he believed the
FCC "gave a reasoned explanation for its change of standard."
Fox said it was "very pleased with the court's decision"
and that it believes "that government regulation of content
serves no purpose other than to chill artistic expression in
violation of the First Amendment."
"Viewers should be allowed to determine for themselves and
their families, through the many parental control technologies
available, what is appropriate viewing for their home," Fox
said.
BUSH ADMINISTRATION CRACKDOWN
The FCC under the Bush administration embarked on a
crackdown of indecent content on broadcast TV and radio in 2004
after pop star Janet Jackson briefly exposed her bare breast
during the broadcast of that year's Super Bowl halftime show.
A few weeks after that incident, the FCC reversed an
earlier staff decision and ruled that the fleeting use of an
expletive by U2 rock star Bono during a 2003 NBC broadcast was
indecent.
FCC Chairman Martin has pressed subscription television
services to give customers the option of blocking channels they
find offensive and on Monday opened the door for the idea of
blocking broadcast channels as well.
"Permitting parents to have more choice in the channels
they receive may prove to be the best solution to content
concerns," he said.
(Additional reporting by Peter Kaplan in Washington and Paul
Thomasch in New York)
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