|
FCC Loss a Huge Victory for Free Expression Groups
June 12, 2007
On June 4, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit rejected the Federal
Communications Commission's new rule that bans "fleeting expletives"
that occur occasionally on broadcast television. The FCC had contended that
all expletives implied sexual or excretory acts and therefore could be banned,
but the court declared that these words are often used to express frustration
and excitement -- meaning a blanket ban on the words violated the First Amendment.
"This is an important decision at a time when the FCC is trying to aggressively
expand its power to censor both broadcast and cable TV," said Chris Finan,
president of the American Booksellers Foundation for Free Expression (ABFFE).
"It should see the ruling as a warning shot, but we are not optimistic.
The FCC has just asked Congress to give it the authority to regulate violence
in TV programming."
Last November, ABFFE joined a coalition of 20 free expression groups, community
broadcasters, filmmakers, performers, and authors to file a brief arguing that
new standards adopted by the commission to censor "indecency" on the
airwaves are overly vague and unconstitutional.
In March 2006, the FCC declared that only "in rare contexts" will
"language that is presumptively profane" be permitted in radio and
TV broadcasts and condemned dozens of programs containing coarse language or
sexual situations. One of the condemned programs was a PBS documentary by Martin
Scorsese that explored the history of American blues and included interviews
with people who used the words "shit" and "fuck." The FCC
stated, "We disagree that the use of such language was necessary to express
any particular viewpoint." The television networks have challenged the
new standards in court.
The amicus brief joined by ABFFE argued that the new FCC standards, coupled
with the threat of fines of up to $325,000 that were authorized by Congress
this year, would have a chilling affect on free speech on TV and radio, particularly
on nonprofit broadcasters who do not have the resources to challenge fines in
court. The brief noted that public radio stations have already "bleeped"
words from documentaries about the 9/11 attacks and the Iraq War. Rocky Mountain
PBS canceled the historical documentary Marie Antoinette because it included
sexually suggestive engravings.
In its recent decision, the appeals court called the FCC's expletives rule
"arbitrary and capricious because none of the FCC's rationales for the
rule made any sense or were supported by evidence," as reported on the
Free Expression Policy
Project website. The court pointed out that, though the FCC contended that
viewers should not have to hear expletives, it sometimes made exceptions for
news broadcasts or films, such as Saving Private Ryan. The court also
noted that the FCC's contention that "fuck" and "shit" have
only sexual or excretory meaning "defies any common-sense understanding
of these words."
According to the New York Times, Kevin Martin, the FCC chairman, said
the agency is contemplating whether or not to request a rehearing by all the
judges of the Second Circuit or taking the issue directly to the Supreme Court.
Topics: Free Expression,
Printer friendly version
Email this article to a friend
ABA Booksellers: Discuss this article online
|