Lkeller said:
sloux said:
djj said:
Someone correct me if I'm wrong - wasn't CBS, or Westinghouse, or whatever it was known as then, planning to
buy 1540 just to shut it down so they could possibly expand 1550 during the KPIX-AM 1550/FM 95.7 years in
the mid-1990s?
Enlighten me...can Ownership get away with purchasing a station with the intent of making it go dark in order to leverage another station? How is that proper stewardship of the public airwaves?
Doesn't the FCC care about ANYTHING anymore?
Oh yes! The FCC cares very much about protecting the innocent unsuspecting public from:
1. Body parts that belong to
living people, such as Janet Jackson's bare breasts. NOTE: body parts such as internal organs and severed limbs are now OK to look at as long as a they are pretend, and a
"mature audience" warning is broadcast. These warnings make children turn off the TV immediately.
2. Sexual content they determine to be prurient, not educational. NOTE: Violence is OK to show as long as a "mature" audience warning is broadcast. See item #1.
3. "Dirty" words. NOTE: these the same words we hear on the street dozens of times every day.
I hope I have enlightened you, sioux.
I'm not quite sure what to make of the sarcasm, lkeller. The FCC's pursuit of certain content now spans a couple of generations and many presidencies both Democrat and Republican since the infamous
Pacifica case. I still find the "intrusiveness of broadcasting" argument valid, although I'm sure most participating on the boards would not. I don't believe there is a proven Safe Harbor, and the lunacy of disclaimers being effective is apparent to everyone except the FCC. If your subtext is that the FCC talks out of both sides of its collective mouth on this issue, I tend to agree, and feel they have lost their way. Certainly the agency has completely lost focus of the primary mandate to ensure a multiplicty of local voices over a spectrum characterized by some degree of scarcity, a spectrum which belongs to the PEOPLE of the United States who have appointed Congress and in turn the FCC to act as Trustee. It cannot be in the best interest of the people when owners are allowed to buy and sell stations like pork bellies to manipulate the spectrum to their own self-interest. Broadcasting
is a business first, in the mind of most license holders, and I do not disagree with that (and the FCC has always recognized stations must be economically viable). But beyond economic viability, the FCC's role is in fact to make sure the self-interst of a few does not infringe on the public interest of all.
Last fall was all about the nebulous "change" so many were seeking from our political leadership. With a decided Democrat majority in Congress and now a President-elect from the same party capable of appointing a new chairman, it's time for some change in the FCC, don't you think??
Okay, I'll get off my soapbox.