Regulation of Broadcasting, Cable, - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 26
About This Presentation
Title:

Regulation of Broadcasting, Cable,

Description:

Gives federal government right to license. Establishes 'public trustee' model ... Janet Jackson's wardrobe malfunction changes climate. Chapter 12 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:104
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 27
Provided by: pauls80
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Regulation of Broadcasting, Cable,


1
Regulation of Broadcasting, Cable, Satellite
  • Chapter 12

2
Regulatory Climate Characteristics
  • FCC De-Regulation
  • Mega-Mergers
  • Media Convergence

3
Categories of Media
  • Print least regulated
  • Broadcast most regulated
  • Cable, Satellite hybrids
  • Common Carrier required access

4
Origin of Broadcast Regulation
  • Radio was a hobbyists toy
  • But also a matter of life and death
  • Republic and Florida collide in January, 1909
  • 1500 lives saved by radio SOS
  • Wireless Ship Act of 1910
  • Radio Act of 1912
  • Industry itself demands more regulation

5
Radio Act of 1927
  • Gives federal government right to license
  • Establishes public trustee model
  • Created Federal Radio Commission
  • Replaced by Federal Communication Act of 1934

6
The FCC Structure
  • 5 Commissioners serve 5 year terms
  • No more than 3 from one party

7
The Commissioners (as of 8/07)
Kevin J. Martin (Chair)
Michael J. Copps
Jonathan S. Adelstein
Robert M. McDowell
Deborah Taylor Tate
8
The FCC Procedures
  • Notice of Proposed Rule Making NPRM
  • Public comments comments upon comments
  • Report and Order
  • Actions against individual stations require a
    pattern of abuse
  • Letter of Inquiry
  • Notice of Apparent Liability
  • Cease and Desist Orders
  • Fines
  • Probationary License Renewal
  • License Revocation

9
Ancillary Powers Doctrine
  • Federal Communication Act gives FCC authority
    over individual licensee holders interstate
    dealings
  • Courts have extended this power to
  • Networks
  • Cable
  • Intrastate Signals

10
Treat broadcast differently?
  • Scarcity of Spectrum
  • Pervasiveness/Intrusiveness
  • Watching TV v. Reading a specific book
  • The need to protect children

11
Licensure Ownership
  • Requirements to own a station
  • Good character
  • US citizen, or 75 US ownership
  • Technical expertise
  • Financial stability (3 months worth)
  • May not reach more than 35 of TV households
  • NO absolute limit on number of stations
  • NO limit on radio stations at all
  • Affirmative Action requirements virtually gone

12
Technological Advances
  • HDTV
  • Licensees given a second frequency
  • Switch to digital to be finished by 2009
  • Closed Captioning
  • New Programs captioned as of 2006
  • Descriptive Video Services
  • Congress takes a more cautious approach
  • FCC tried to require modest amount of DVS
  • D.C. Circuit Court refuses

13
Candidate Access Rule
  • Federal candidates may buy time, cheaply
  • Stations may refuse to sell long spots
  • Does not require giving time
  • Stations know they should make believe rule
    applies to candidates for all offices

14
Equal Time Rule (Section 315)
  • Candidates use of airtime must be equal
  • Stations may not censor content
  • Applies to all offices

A presidential run by former senator Fred
Thompson would result in his old movies and Law
and Order re-runs triggering the rule.
15
When are you a candidate?
  • Publicly Announce
  • Qualified to hold the office
  • Meet filing requirements
  • Party nomination, or substantial showing

16
Not all uses count
  • Regularly scheduled interview programs
  • Incidental appearances on documentaries
  • Political Debates
  • News coverage

Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger 2007 appearance on
The Tonight Show did not trigger rule
17
Regulation of Sexual Speech
  • Section 1484 bans broadcast of obscenity
  • Also prohibits indecent broadcasts
  • No SLAPS test
  • Need not be judged as a whole
  • Need not appeal to prurient interest
  • Congress raises per incident fine tenfold in 2006
  • Leading case is FCC v. Pacifica
  • Safe Harbor 10PM to 6 AM
  • Janet Jacksons wardrobe malfunction changes
    climate

18
Childrens TV
  • Childrens TV Act, and FCC regulations
  • Mandate 3 weekly hours of educational programs
  • FCC fines Univision 24 million for fudging
  • Fed law also limits commercials on kid TV
  • Program length commercials permitted
  • No commercials for Toy X on program featuring Toy
    X
  • V chips required by 1996 Act
  • Very few parents use them

19
Public Broadcasting
  • CPB must justify continued funding
  • Special Rules on PBS/NPR
  • Objectivity to characterize every program
  • Underwriting, not commercials
  • May not endorse candidates

20
Cable TV
  • Began in 1940s to get TV to rural areas
  • Presented a regulation problem
  • Not exactly like print
  • Needs govt permission to lay cable
  • Not exactly like common carrier
  • Makes editorial decisions
  • Not exactly like broadcast
  • Does not need to use the public airwaves
  • Courts at first backed FCC
  • Then began to rein in the Commission

21
Cable Act of 1984
  • Gave cities explicit rights to regulate
  • They could require certain kinds of access
  • Public/Educational/Govt PEG
  • Leased Access
  • But they could not demand a specific service
  • Redlining prohibited
  • Gave cable companies rights too
  • Renewal Expectation
  • Limit on franchising fees

22
The Cable Television Consumer Protection
Competition Act of 1992
  • Reimposed FCC control over rates
  • Set clear guidelines for customer service
  • Answer phones in 30 seconds
  • Maintain presence 24/7
  • Install within one week
  • Refunds for outages
  • Ownership limits struck down
  • Warner Entertainment v. FCC (2001)

23
Telecommunication Act of 1996
  • Cable, local and long distance telephone, now
    able to compete in each others markets
  • Result seems to have been merger mania

24
Cable the First Amendment
  • TREATED LIKE PRINT
  • Laws against indecent speech usually struck down
  • Denver Area (1996)
  • Playboy Entertainment (2000)
  • TREATED LIKE BROADCAST
  • Equal Time Rule
  • Candidate Access Rule
  • Closed Captioning

25
Must Carry rules
  • 1992 Act gave broadcasters a choice
  • Either insist on free carriage OR
  • Negotiate to be paid for the right to be carried
  • PBS treated differently
  • Must be carried
  • First Tier
  • No payment to station
  • Upheld in Turner v. FCC (1997).

26
DBS
  • DirectTV and Echostar biggest names
  • Direct broadcast from satellite to home dish
  • Unclear how to regulate
  • No real local presence
  • So what community should they serve?
  • Candidate Access, Equal Time Rules apply
  • Carry one, Carry all rule
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com