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This column was reprinted by permission of L. Brent Bozell and Creators Syndicate. To reprint this or any of his twice weekly syndicated columns, please contact Creators Syndicate at (310) 337-7003 ext. 110


 

 

 

 

 L. Brent Bozell

 

Getting "Queasy" At The FCC

by L. Brent Bozell III
April 10, 2003
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The Federal Communications Commission has never been a U.S. Office of Censorship, browbeating broadcasters into relentlessly bland programming. Despite being mandated the responsibility to insure against broadcast indecency between the hours of 6 AM and 10 PM, tasked to protect the innocent eyes and ears of our young children, how many times has the FCC fined a TV station or network for violating decency standards? None. Try and find one.

Radio broadcasting is just slightly different. A steady stream of complaints about Howard Stern and his ilk on the FM dial have drawn some minimal fines, nuisance fees for multi-million-dollar radio enterprises. These fines aren't slaps on the wrist - they're occasions for great bad-boy advertising. Shock jocks openly laugh on the air at them.

On April 3, the FCC fined a Detroit radio station the statutory maximum fine of $27,500 for an "egregious" violation of decency standards. The bureaucrats warned they would not hesitate to react strongly to future violations, including possible license revocation. But there aren't a lot of quaking boots in the radio business.

For his part, FCC chairman Michael Powell recently told a National Association of Broadcasters event that he "gets queasy" when the government plays content cop. He reminded the audience, and commissioners seated in front of him, that commissioners "are unelected regulators who have no direct accountability" to the citizenry.

That is true, but it is also true that Powell serves at the pleasure of the President of the United States, who said he would restore honor and integrity to the White House, but never suggested he would restore any fraction of honor and integrity to the largest streams of popular culture. Bush strategist Karl Rove overtly steered candidate Bush around any sermons against immoral entertainment. If Powell ever decided to put his mouth where the fine money is and denounce irresponsible filth on TV and radio, he would probably get a call from the White House political affairs office.

To his credit, Powell defended the Detroit fine as well-deserved. He claimed the commission will go after stations and owners who are egregious and flaunting in their violation of obscenity standards. That would be very welcome. It might even be surprisingly popular. But when the emcee of the NAB event, ABC star Sam Donaldson, inquired why the commission does not use the "death penalty" of license revocation in extreme cases, Powell became a spokesman for moral equivalence: "What is really rude to some people is acceptable adult entertainment to others."

It's impossible for an elected official to be any more equivocating than that. Hard-core porn is "acceptable adult entertainment" to some. I doubt Powell would consider openly racist broadcasting to be "acceptable adult entertainment." But radio and TV broadcasters should never assume that they are only being monitored by adults, especially in the middle of the afternoon.

If Powell gets "queasy" assessing fines, everyone who hears or reads what Detroit's WKRK-FM put on the airwaves last year would be well-served by having an airsickness bag handy. The ""Deminski & Doyle Show,"" which airs from 3 to 7 PM, had an extremely graphic discussion with callers about "funky sex maneuvers," which carried names like the "Cleveland Steamer,"" the "Chili Dog," the "Rusty Trombone," and the "Manhattan Hot Platter." Most of them involved males demeaning a female partner with defecation, even diarrhea. It's hard to imagine, but it grew even more offensive, as callers began laughing about the fun of punching women in the stomach or the nose after they performed like Monica Lewinsky in the White House.

What self-respecting father of daughters would not hit a seven-second delay button to screen out every one of these callers? But Deminski & Doyle did nothing but encourage them. And for that, they should have followed in the footsteps of "Opie and Anthony," who were fired last August for encouraging sex acts in a Catholic church. What these poor excuses for adults were encouraging was worse: not only incredibly vile talk, but encouraging violent and demeaning action toward women.

Powell and the other FCC commissioners need to put the "queasy" feelings aside and have some moral backbone. Washington needs to speak out and at the very least make local communities aware of the utter lack of "community standards" they uphold.

None of this will happen without public outcry. But then what? Let's say a concerned Detroit citizen tried to take the transcript of this perverted sex-with-excrement segment and place it in a full-page ad in a family newspaper -- a media outlet, I'm sad to report, which is not usually a playground for children or teenagers. I doubt a family newspaper would accept the ad. So why should the radio industry, with millions of young listeners, be less responsible?

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