Supreme Court rules against networks on indecent speech

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http://www.cnn.com/2009/US/04/28/supreme.court.indecent.speech/index.html

Nanny State conservatives on Supreme Court. Yippee!

WASHINGTON (CNN) -- The Supreme Court ruled on Tuesday federal regulators have the authority to clamp down on the broadcast TV networks that air isolated cases of profanity, known as "fleeting expletives."

The 5-4 vote was a victory for Bush-era officials who pushed fines and sanctions when racy images and language reached the airwaves.

Controversial words have been aired in scripted and unscripted instances on all the major over-the-air networks in the past six years -- dating back to when the Federal Communications Commission began considering a stronger, no-tolerance policy.

"It suffices the new policy is permissible under the statute, there are good reasons for it, and the agency believes it to be better," said Justice Antonin Scalia, writing for the conservative majority.

The high court, however, refused to decide whether the commission's policy violates the First Amendment guarantee of free speech, only the agency's enforcement power. The justices ordered the free-speech aspect to be reviewed again by a federal appeals court.

ABC, CBS, NBC and Fox were parties in the case. A federal appeals court in New York had ruled in their favor, calling the commission's policy "arbitrary and capricious."

The commission then appealed to the Supreme Court, seeking restoration of its power to penalize the networks airing "indecent" speech, even if it is broadcast only one time, and even if it does not describe a specific sex act.

The high court agreed to some extent. "Even when used as an expletive, the F-word's power to insult and offend derives from its sexual meaning," wrote Scalia.

Such language is heard with greater, albeit varying frequency on cable television, the Internet, and satellite radio, which do not use public airwaves. But the federal government is charged with responding to viewer complaints when "indecent" language reaches broadcast television and radio, which is subject to greater regulation. That is especially relevant during daytime and early evening hours, when larger numbers of families and younger viewers may be watching.

The FCC's acting chairman, Michael Copps, called Tuesday's ruling a "a big win for America's families."

The commission formally reversed its policy in March 2004 to declare even a single use of an expletive could be illegal.

The changes became known as the "Golden Globes Rule," for singer Bono's 2003 acceptance speech at the awards show on NBC, where he uttered the phrase "really, really, f---ing brilliant."

The commission specifically cited celebrities Cher and Nicole Richie for potty-mouth language in the 2002 and 2003 Billboard Music Awards, which aired on Fox. Richie, in an apparent scripted moment said, "Have you ever tried to get cow s--t out of a Prada purse? It's not so f---ing simple."

The complaint against ABC involved "NYPD Blue," a now-canceled scripted police drama, and the CBS' complaint involved "The Early Show," a news and interview program.

Enforcement of the law had been put on hold while the case was being argued.

In dissent, Justice John Paul Stevens said "customs of speech" and context made the Federal Communications Commission's position unworkable.

"As any golfer who has watched his partner shank a short approach knows, it would be absurd to accept the suggestion that the resultant four-letter word uttered on the golf course describes sex or excrement and is therefore indecent," he wrote. "But that is the absurdity the FCC has embraced in its new approach to indecency."

And Stevens wondered why the agency was going after words that he said had a "tenuous relationship" to sex and bodily functions, while at the same time prime-time commercials "frequently ask viewers whether they, too, are battling erectile dysfunction or are having trouble going to the bathroom."

Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg made clear how she viewed the broader free speech questions the high may be forced to confront in coming years. "There is no way to hide the long shadow the First Amendment casts over what the commission has done," she wrote.

The Supreme Court first ventured into the broadcast speech debate in 1978, when it ruled as indecent a monologue by comedian George Carlin on society's taboo surrounding "seven dirty words." The bit had received some radio airplay. Stevens, 89, was the author of that opinion.

Justice Clarence Thomas sided with his fellow conservatives on the narrow question presented to the court, but noted the changing landscape of television since Stevens' 31-year-old ruling. He said that and other high court precedents "were unconvincing when they were issued, and the passage of time has only increased doubt regarding their continued validity." He questioned the communication commission's underlying authority as a "deep intrusion into the First Amendment rights of broadcasters."

And he noted the four networks no longer have a virtual monopoly on television content. "For most consumers, traditional broadcast media programming is now bundled with cable or satellite services," he said but the Federal Communications Commission's authority extends only to over-the-air television and radio content.

Conservative and family groups called Tuesday's ruling an "incredible victory."

"We implore the broadcast networks to abide by today's court's ruling rather than to pursue a path of attempted obstruction with countless legal maneuverings," said Tim Winter, president of the Parents Television Council, which monitors content on the airwaves. "And we encourage the FCC to use today's opinion to break the indecency complaint logjam, and rule on the merits of the tens of thousands of indecency complaints currently awaiting review at the commission."

There was no immediate reaction from the broadcast networks, but groups representing the artistic and creative community expressed displeasure.iReport.com: Share your thoughts on indecency on television

"Today's decision is extremely disappointing," said Andrew Jay Schwartzman, head of the Media Access Project. "We remain hopeful that the FCC's restrictive policies will ultimately be declared unconstitutional, but there will be several more years of uncertainty, and impaired artistic expression, while the lower courts address the First Amendment issues which the court chose not to confront today."

Time Warner -- the parent company of CNN -- filed an amicus brief supporting the networks fined by the communications commission. The company is part owner of the CW broadcast network, and operates several cable networks.

The case is FCC v. Fox Television Stations (07-582).
 
The Supreme Court ruled on Tuesday federal regulators have the authority to clamp down on the broadcast TV networks that air isolated cases of profanity, known as "fleeting expletives."...
A shred of sanity in an otherwise profane world.
 
Government interference where none is needed.

Let private industry run its own show. Let the customers make the rules with their business.
 
I'm stunned.

Are you suggesting Obama has the authority to tell the Supreme Court which cases to hear?

do you really think the scotus only hears cases they just randomnly pick and that people don't appeal to the scotus?

in skimming the article i thought it said bush officials brought the case, instead it says they pushed for the fines...and since the FCC is independent obama of course could not withdraw the case....
 
The airways are owned by the public and they shall be kept clean.

And the networks are privately owned. This is like the people who worked to ban "Of Mice and Men" from the library because it had "goddamn" in it 52 times.

Removing certain words from public view does not change anything
 
And the networks are privately owned. This is like the people who worked to ban "Of Mice and Men" from the library because it had "goddamn" in it 52 times.

Removing certain words from public view does not change anything
I never worked to ban any book, except those in my own home. And as a member of the public, I own a portion of the airwaves according to FCC rules, and expect to have them kept clean. Either change the rules or accept its regulation.
 
My favorite part of the opinion has to be this unadulterated horseshit from Scalia:

We doubt, to begin with, that small-town broadcasters run a heightened risk of liability for indecent utterances. In programming that they originate, their down-home local guests probably employ vulgarity less than big-city folks; and small-town stations generally cannot afford or cannot attract foul-mouthed glitteratae from Hollywood.

For the record, Scalia was born in Trenton, grew up in Queens, went to high school in Manhattan, college in D.C., law school in Boston then worked in Cleveland, Chicago and then back to D.C. Presumably he picked up this knowledge of small-town broadcasters and their down-home local guests during his life in the rural communities of America.
 
My favorite part of the opinion has to be this unadulterated horseshit from Scalia:



For the record, Scalia was born in Trenton, grew up in Queens, went to high school in Manhattan, college in D.C., law school in Boston then worked in Cleveland, Chicago and then back to D.C. Presumably he picked up this knowledge of small-town broadcasters and their down-home local guests during his life in the rural communities of America.

I have lived my entire life in rural areas. We are just as vulgar as anyone else.
 
I am always confused by conservatives that preach limited government and less interference, and yet want interference for their pet peeves.
 
I'm stunned.

Are you suggesting Obama has the authority to tell the Supreme Court which cases to hear?
He has the authority to decide if they go forward with the request for them to hear, or whether to drop their defense if it was the TV cos that brought it forward...

If the government simply drops opposition there would be no suit for them to hear.
 
He has the authority to decide if they go forward with the request for them to hear, or whether to drop their defense if it was the TV cos that brought it forward...

If the government simply drops opposition there would be no suit for them to hear.


1) This case was argued in November. Once argued you can't really tell the Supreme Court nevermind.

2) I don't believe that the President has the authority to decide to drop a defense to a challenge to the legitimacy of an action of an independent commission like the F.C.C.

I know, for example, that the Solicitor General is obligated to defend a statute against any constitutional challenge even if the President opposes the statute. I believe the same is true of Solicitor General arguing on behalf of a independent commission such as the F.C.C.
 
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