One more reason to bring back the Fairness Doctrine.
Here is a question. If the Fairness Doctrine was still in effect today, would it cool some of the toxicity in the media?
One more reason to bring back the Fairness Doctrine.
It would be completely unworkeable.Here is a question. If the Fairness Doctrine was still in effect today, would it cool some of the toxicity in the media?
The ads are raising awareness among those who use AM and seem to like at least one station. If you are going to have a political rally, don't you start with the members of your own party?An AM station promoting AM radio. Talk about self-serving. Talk about preaching to the choir. Something about grocery store owners.
That is the biggest non sequitur I have seen in quite a while. So now supermarket owners are all radicals?It was another grocery store owner who was behind black listing in the 50s.
The terms used inside a station are at the discretion of the station itself. Most of us, I am sure, would consider any self promoting announcement to be a "promo".As I think about it, it does not seem the bit WABC is running can be considered a PSA (public service announcement). Maybe a promo but that's stretching things. Closer to an editorial.
And Fairness was repealed because of convincing arguments like this:Whether manufacturers should be required to put AM in car radios is an issue before congress and a federal regulatory agency, which makes it a political issue. One more reason to bring back the Fairness Doctrine.
Which is also why whatever an unnamed lawyer might have told you in the early 1980s, or whatever gentlemen's agreements were made among Puerto Rico broadcasters 50 years ago, here in the present day in 2025 there's no FCC regulation binding broadcasters about which commercial clients' spots they choose to accept and decline. The only restrictions that exist in black-letter FCC regulation are the lowest-unit-rate rules that require a station that takes spots from any candidate for a federal office to also take spots from every other candidate for that office, and to charge the lowest unit rate for those spots. But that applies only to advertising purchased directly by a candidate's campaign during an election period.And Fairness was repealed because of convincing arguments like this:
The intrusion by government into the content of programming occasioned by the enforcement of [the fairness doctrine] restricts the journalistic freedom of broadcasters ... [and] actually inhibits the presentation of controversial issues of public importance to the detriment of the public and the degradation of the editorial prerogative of broadcast journalists.
(August 4, 1987, under FCC Chairman Dennis R. Patrick)
Bernie Koteen and Ray Kraus of Koteen & Burt. In fact, the approval we got for our plan to set quotas on applicable political advertisements was issued as a full-fledged all-client memo. Similarly, we set precedent with another proceeding before the Commission where we had the "race" specification removed from the annual EEO reports for stations in Puerto Rico because there is no dividing point between races there that would not also be the utmost form of discrimination.Which is also why whatever an unnamed lawyer might have told you in the early 1980s,
I never said there was. I specifically mentioned that the issue of "taking local rum ads but not taking other hard liquor ads" was a "Fair Trade" issue falling under several other U.S. Government agencies. Similarly, the NAB had to drop its "Code" because it was considered collusion in the same manner as price fixing by competitors. Not an FCC issue, but every bit a part of running a radio station... or a trade association... as FCC rules.or whatever gentlemen's agreements were made among Puerto Rico broadcasters 50 years ago, here in the present day in 2025 there's no FCC regulation binding broadcasters about which commercial clients' spots they choose to accept and decline.
And the case I mentioned defined a station's ability to limit the total number of spots that any applicable candidate in any applicable election could buy.The only restrictions that exist in black-letter FCC regulation are the lowest-unit-rate rules that require a station that takes spots from any candidate for a federal office to also take spots from every other candidate for that office, and to charge the lowest unit rate for those spots. But that applies only to advertising purchased directly by a candidate's campaign during an election period.
But they can. They certainly were part, along with the DoJ and others, in nudging the NAB to drop the Code, which had no bearing on anything involving the FCC, but had everything to do with free trade.Nor has the FTC (which has been rendered toothless by the current administration) intervened at any point in the recent past to regulate a commercial broadcaster's choices of whether or not to accept specific advertising content.
Case law does not expire. That means that any organization, individual or government agency can and will bring up past cases in current actions, should they be brought.Unless, of course, you have a specific citation of a current case to the contrary.
I can recall as recently as this decade memos from corporate legal and supported by opinions by outside counsel cautioning management, sales management and even salespersons from limiting access to specific advertisers without consulting them.(And yes, it's a given that if this particular administration wanted to force stations to carry its ad content, it would weaponize its FCC and whatever's left of the FTC and DOJ to try to get its way, regardless of what laws are on paper, which is probably why most broadcasters aren't resisting the buys.)
There are entire books about the subject. Oddly, the Wikipedia article gives a broad overview but does not detail what you bring up... which is perhaps the most important aspect... what it did not cover.As for the Fairness Doctrine in general, it was and continues to be one of the most misunderstood rules among everyone other than communications lawyers. It seems like 99% or more of the time someone on social media brings up "but, but, the Fairness Doctrine," it's about something the FD actually never covered, and would not cover if it were still in effect today.
Limbaugh had a show during the Fairness Doctrine, and I think talk radio would have still extended the life of AM. I don't believe "fairness" would have meant conservative host followed by libersl host, followed by..." but in the late 80s through mid-90s, Tom Leykis was a liberal doing a talk show (even though I was more conservative then I thought he defended liberal positions well and was entertaining), Michael Jackson (the KABC/Talkradio host) Alan Colmes, guys like Bob Lassiter might have been too much for some markets back then but you get the idea. Air America putting mostly non-broadcasters on in the 00s was entirely different.Books and literature on the Fairness Doctrine sadly aren't readily available to combat social media microblogging posts that complain about an outlet airing political views they don't like and don't think about the potential consequences of their actions.
Removing the Doctrine likely extended the lifespan of AM by about 20–30 years overall, especially in smaller markets that could barely afford to keep the old-school mom-and-pop setups going, with round-the-clock personalities and robust news departments (to speak of other artifacts from a bygone era). But Rush would have still been nationally syndicated and people like Cats would still be station owners. And we would still be talking on here about how long before AM stations give up the ghost altogether... possibly by 2010 instead of 2030.
I don't believe "fairness" would have meant conservative host followed by libersl host, followed by..."
But there are often more than two sides.Fairness would mean hearing both sides of the argument on any given topic.
Right side, Left side and the truth.But there are often more than two sides.
If the fairness doctrine were in effect today, I bet it would provide for better talk radio. Too much of what is on now is predictable before the hosts even open up the mike. Clay & Buck, Sean and Mark Levin are all going to be pro Trump every day, every issue. NPR is going to be anti-Trump, every day, every issue. If they had to mix it up, either with paired Hannity/Colmes style or red followed by blue shows, they might bring in more listeners. If the red/blue show idea is thought to be unworkable, maybe that would be because there IS too much vitriol in the content. A mellower, more 'let's solve the problem' attitude is where many people are politically. In many areas the number of independent voters rivals those who are registered one way or the other. Are those independents a market that can be tapped? I bet a lot of them can't take the negative attitudes that permeate talk programming today.Here is a question. If the Fairness Doctrine was still in effect today, would it cool some of the toxicity in the media?
Let's clear up one point you made, Stuart. NPR is not "anti-Trump". They don't, as a news organization, take any editorial position against Trump one way or the other. Their news programs – Morning Edition, All Things Considered, Here & Now, Weekend Edition – go out of their way to be even-handed, interviewing supporters and detractors, attempting to give his administration's officials and/or spokespeople equivalent time. The problem is many of their representatives ignore their invitations, or outright refuse them. Or, when they are willing to come on any of the NPR programs, they won't answer tough questions, or they bluster, or they're outright hostile in how they respond. That doesn't make for good radio, and it sure doesn't make for civil discussions.If the fairness doctrine were in effect today, I bet it would provide for better talk radio. Too much of what is on now is predictable before the hosts even open up the mike. Clay & Buck, Sean and Mark Levin are all going to be pro Trump every day, every issue. NPR is going to be anti-Trump, every day, every issue. If they had to mix it up, either with paired Hannity/Colmes style or red followed by blue shows, they might bring in more listeners. If the red/blue show idea is thought to be unworkable, maybe that would be because there IS too much vitriol in the content. A mellower, more 'let's solve the problem' attitude is where many people are politically. In many areas the number of independent voters rivals those who are registered one way or the other. Are those independents a market that can be tapped? I bet a lot of them can't take the negative attitudes that permeate talk programming today.
OK. Forget about Trump. A national news organization that has zero-point-zero registered Republicans on their staff is going to have some political bias, and the summary at the end of any report is going to be left leaning. I can understand why no Democrat would want to go on an AM radio shout fest where the objective is an emphatically hard right beatdown. But I question whether Republicans repeatedly refuse to appear on a calmer atmosphere at NPR/PRI/APM programming. Some wiseguy like Charlie Kirk would probably be all in on getting on their air, but the public radio hosts don't want the challenge. (I don't agree with him a lot of the time, and the youtube postings I've seen are probably heavily edited, but Kirk does have the ability to respond in a give and take).Let's clear up one point you made, Stuart. NPR is not "anti-Trump". They don't, as a news organization, take any editorial position against Trump one way or the other.
But not necessarily in the same program.Fairness would mean hearing both sides of the argument on any given topic.
Actually, talk radio was dying before "Fariness" was eliminated. Most shows were not adversarial. What you had was Roman gladiators modeling their armor instead of fighting. The repeal of "Fairness" permitted Rush to be outspoken, and others followed. Many consider that Limbaugh alone gave AM radio another two decades or a bit more of productive life.If the fairness doctrine were in effect today, I bet it would provide for better talk radio. Too much of what is on now is predictable before the hosts even open up the mike. Clay & Buck, Sean and Mark Levin are all going to be pro Trump every day, every issue. NPR is going to be anti-Trump, every day, every issue. If they had to mix it up, either with paired Hannity/Colmes style or red followed by blue shows, they might bring in more listeners.
But that is not what talk hosts do. Continuing with my Roman Coliseum analogy, people want a passionate, fighting attitude. "Mellow" does not get AQH listening.If the red/blue show idea is thought to be unworkable, maybe that would be because there IS too much vitriol in the content. A mellower, more 'let's solve the problem' attitude is where many people are politically.
Conservative talk appeals to the farther right, because they tend to have broadly similar attitudes on gender, immigration, big government, education, raising a family and the like.In many areas the number of independent voters rivals those who are registered one way or the other. Are those independents a market that can be tapped? I bet a lot of them can't take the negative attitudes that permeate talk programming today.
And are they aware that some people are actually revolted by the tabloid cover look? (I'm one of them.)Mr. Cats owns/runs a chain (or two) of supermarkets. The ad resembles a weekly mailer for a supermarket. (Or the front cover of the National Inquirer, sold at most supermarket checkout stands.) So it is self-parody, whether intended or not.
That's exactly what conservative talk radio has become within the past decade, or even longer. Rush Limbaugh calling Sandra Fluke the S-word in 2012 is when it jumped the shark, and it has never recovered since then. That was just insulting to be mean, not insulting to be funny.(Those who would disagree with my analysis of liberals and the failure of the liberal talk web will say that the hosts sounded like campaigners instead of entertainers; too much passion for the cause and not enough fun in each show).
I have no idea what they're aware of. I was just analyzing what I was seeing. Don't shoot theAnd are they aware that some people are actually revolted by the tabloid cover look? (I'm one of them.)
For some eyes, it conveys urgency.
For mine, the visual chaos makes everything about it scream bulls--t and that also transfers to their message, whether that also was intended to or not. It's just sad modern media has been reduced to this.
But we're talking about WABC, So "modern media" is a bit of a stretch anyway.