I couldn't find any for this hearing so if there were stations carrying it live the numbers would be small and inconsequential.
All you need is one station and one complaint. And apparently we know of at least one radio station.
I couldn't find any for this hearing so if there were stations carrying it live the numbers would be small and inconsequential.
All you need is one station and one complaint.
It's possible that WCSP or other any other broadcaster had a board-op to dump out of the hearing.
Of course, I don't think anyone is saying that's not the case. When the WNBC weather said the F-bomb there would be tens of thousands of people watching (and that might be conservative) while WCSP has listenership in the maybe in thousands likely in the hundreds. so obviously there is a far greater chance of someone filing a complaint to the FCC about WNBC. It's possible that WCSP or other any other broadcaster had a board-op to dump out of the hearing.
Is WCSP truly live or does it run a 7-second delay? Normally, you'd think one would never be needed at a government function, but these are not normal times. Maybe the word was caught and bleeped before it made air. Good luck to us, though, in actually hearing from a poster who was tuned to the station at that very moment!
Imagine being Howard Stern or Drake when you find out that the Chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee just dropped the F word during live TV coverage of the William Barr hearings today.
https://www.foxnews.com/politics/watch-lindsey-graham-f-bomb-barr-testimony
The courts have ruled that indecency is based on community standards. So the bar (so to speak) has now been set that one can use this language on live TV. So if during tonight's Billboard Music Awards, such language is used by a rapper or a rock star, it's now OK. Especially since the Senator used it at 10AM.
We have a president who says BS (the full word, not the letters) and a senator who says the f-word. What does this say about community standards today? If I aired the Senate hearings today, and one of my listeners complains to the FCC, what is my defense? Or will no one complain because of the context? And if so, why is this context permissible, and it's not when sung by a rap star on a live awards show? There was nothing newsworthy about it. These texts are three years old.
https://www.freedomforuminstitute.org/about/faq/how-does-the-fcc-define-indecent-speech/
Again.Keep the time delay running or edit/bleep out on taped programming.Also dont forget to blur out the mouth .My hearing impaired friend see everything since he reads lips.
Also dont forget to blur out the mouth .My hearing impaired friend see everything since he reads lips.
Isn't live sports exempt from the indecency rules?Surely the FCC isn't fining broadcasters over those incidents! Many times on baseball and football reaction shots, you'll see quarterback reactions to interceptions and pitcher reactions to home runs that consist of one inaudible, but clearly understandable, word -- even to those of us who are neither deaf or trained lip-readers. It's invariably the f or the s bomb. We recognize it because it's the way an overwhelming percentage of sports viewers react when bad things happen.
Isn't live sports exempt from the indecency rules?
Isn't live sports exempt from the indecency rules?
I'm not aware of any such exemption. Just because stations don't get fined doesn't mean it's not against the law.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fleeting_expletive
Is a station going to be fined for that?
Presidential candidate Beto O'Rourke already dropped an F-bomb on live TV last year during his senate campaign concession speech:
http://time.com/5447290/beto-orourke-f-word-speech/
But my understanding was that, after the Bono ruling, the words themselves wouldn?€™t cause a fine, just if they were used in a context that was considered profane or obscene.
There is no delay that is fool proof. The way to prevent it is to not use this language near a live mic. For some reason people in the halls of government don't understand this. Yet they're quick to levy a major fine on someone when it serves their interest. The party in power is acting like there are no consequences. There are consequences for everything. That's the point of this thread.
Surely the FCC isn't fining broadcasters over those incidents! Many times on baseball and football reaction shots, you'll see quarterback reactions to interceptions and pitcher reactions to home runs that consist of one inaudible, but clearly understandable, word -- even to those of us who are neither deaf or trained lip-readers. It's invariably the f or the s bomb. We recognize it because it's the way an overwhelming percentage of sports viewers react when bad things happen.