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The House Committee on Energy and Commerce
Subcommittee on Telecommunications and the Internet
February 11, 2004
10:30 AM
2123 Rayburn House Office Building
Good morning, Mr. Chairman and distinguished Members of the Committee. It is
my pleasure to come before you today with my colleagues on the Commission to
discuss our collective efforts to protect children from sexual, violent and
profane content.
The now infamous display during the Super Bowl halftime show, which represented
a new low in prime time television, is just the latest example in a growing list
of deplorable incidents over the nation's airwaves. This growing coarseness on
television and radio has resulted in a dramatic rise in public concern and
outrage about what is being broadcast into their homes. Over 200,000 concerned
citizens and counting have filed complaints with the Commission on the Super
Bowl incident alone. As a parent, I share the displeasure and fatigue of
millions of Americans about the erosion of common decency standards on
television.
As the federal agency responsible for punishing those who peddle indecent
broadcast programming, I can assure all Americans that my colleagues and I will
continue to protect children and respond to the public's concerns. Under our
authority, and consistent with the First Amendment, we will continue to
vigorously enforce our indecency rules. To punctuate the point, within hours of
the Super Bowl incident, we launched our investigation into whether there was a
violation of the law. This investigation will be thorough and swift.
The Rise of Public Concern
Although the Super Bowl halftime show was a new low for broadcast television (a
recent poll found 47% of Americans said the incident marked "a new low in
bad taste"), a quick flip around the dial during what was once considered
the family hour, reveals coarse content, wholly inappropriate for a time when
children can be expected to be watching. There are reality and dating shows with
heavy sexual themes or scripted programs that feature gratuitous violence and
increasing profanity. Turn the channel and you are likely to see a new program
trying to push the envelope-all in an effort to try and grab ratings and keep
viewers.
Indeed, as new technologies have afforded the public with an abundance of
programming in recent years, audiences, especially in television continue to
fragment. A recent Commission study found that the average television household
had 82 channels available to it in 2001, up from merely 10 channels in 1980.
Over the last two years, that number has only increased. In fact, last year
marked the second consecutive year where more viewers were watching cable
programming during the prime time hours than they were broadcast programming.
This hyper-competition for audience share and ratings has tempted broadcasters
to capture share by resorting to ever more crass, sexual or violent programming.
As evidenced by the rise in the number of complaints at the Commission,
Americans are taking unfavorable notice. In addition to the over 200,000
complaints we received regarding the Super Bowl, 2003 saw the most indecency
complaints in the Commission's history. Over 240,000 complaints were filed at
the Commission last year. As complaints have risen dramatically, however, the
actual number of programs that our citizens complained about to the Commission
actually declined from 2002 to 2003 (from 389 programs to 375 programs).
Furthermore, indecency complaints have historically been focused on broadcast
radio programming. Indeed, only in the last two years has the Commission
received more television than radio complaints. Television complaints have
largely focused on the broadcast medium (217), outpacing cable (36) complaints
over six to one.
At the Commission, we have increased our indecency enforcement efforts to
protect our children against the increase in coarse programming and in response
to the growing concerns expressed by the public about the content being
broadcast over our airwaves. Protecting children and giving parents the tools to
prevent inappropriate programming from invading our family rooms requires action
on all fronts.
The Commission's Strong Enforcement Stance
The effort begins with the Commission. This Commission boasts the most
aggressive enforcement regime in decades, proposing nearly ten times the level
of indecency fines than the previous Commission. And, we are taking additional
steps to sharpen our enforcement blade:
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Recognizing that $27,500 fines constitute peanuts to multi-million dollar
operations, we will actively seek ways to increase penalties against those who
engage in lasting and repetitive indecent programming, including taking steps to
impose the statutory maximum for serious violations of the law (up from $7,000
fines of previous Commissions);
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We will treat multiple indecent utterances with a single program as
constituting multiple indecency violations. I commend Commissioner Martin for
his leadership on this issue;
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We will begin license revocation proceedings for egregious and continuing
disregard of decency laws. Commissioner Copps' efforts on this issue are
particularly noteworthy;
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We will pursue indecent programming on television more
aggressively-including our proposal to overturn the Enforcement Bureau's
decision in the Golden Globes case-a decision by the Commission in that case is
imminent;
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We will continue to work aggressively to answer complaints in a timely
manner (of the 14,000 complaints filed in 2002 only 30 remain pending) and bring
more cases up to the full Commission for review; and
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We will continue to vigorously monitor industry developments to see if
they, indeed, meet the challenge of their responsibilities to protect our
children.
Indeed, the Commission has already begun wielding our sword in several
important respects. We have proposed some of the largest fines in our indecency
enforcement history, including a proposed forfeiture of over $300,000 in the
case of a broadcast of sexual conduct in St. Patrick's Cathedral in New York and
a proposed fine of over $700,000 levied against various Clear Channel stations
for over 20 indecency violations.
In addition, last month, we opened a new front in our effort to protect children
by fining a San Francisco television station the statutory maximum of $27,500
when it aired a program in which a performer exposed himself in front of the
camera-marking one of the first ever fines against a television station in
Commission history. Just this week, I have personally called on the broadcast
and cable industry step to the forefront and take affirmative steps to commit
themselves to protecting children. Specifically, I have challenged broadcasters
to re-institute a voluntary Code of Conduct and urged the broadcast and cable
industries to work with the public to take other steps, such as educational and
outreach campaigns and providing for a delay for live entertainment performance
events.
As the Commission continues to strengthen its enforcement, it needs the help of
both Congress and the industry in the fight for our children. I urge, in the
strongest terms, Congress to adopt legislation that will increase the statutory
maximum of our forfeiture penalties at least ten-fold. I commend Congressman
Upton and Senator Brownback and those Members supporting their respective bills
for their leadership on this issue. We need this increased authority to ensure
that our enforcement actions are meaningful deterrents and not merely a cost of
doing business. Additionally, this deterrent effect can also spread to other
types of coarse or inappropriate programming not suitable for our children, such
as excessive violence.
A Call to Action
The Commission, Congress and the public cannot stand alone in this fight to
protect our children. Indeed, action must be taken by the entire television and
radio industry to heed the public's outcry and take affirmative steps to curb
the race to the bottom. This industry simply must help clean up its own room.
I have written the broadcast industry, the major television networks and the
cable industry and challenged them to take affirmative steps consistent with
antitrust law and within the limits of the First Amendment, to curb indecent,
inappropriate and violent programming.
The industry has the ability to join our efforts to protect children, and it
must. Specifically, I have challenged the National Association of Broadcasters
and the network's owned and operated stations to work with their broadcast
members and the public to reinstate a voluntary code of conduct. Such a code is
necessary to establish effective guidance and best practices to local
broadcasters so that they can best address the needs and concerns of parents,
children and local communities.
I believe these steps would also give the public a meaningful standard by which
to measure performance of the industry over time and demonstrate broadcasters'
unwavering commitment to serving the needs of local communities and to help stem
the surging tide of offensive programming.
In addition, I have asked that the networks themselves continue to take
affirmative steps to better protect the public. I am heartened by recent efforts
to reinstitute a delay into live broadcasts of award shows to prevent
unwarranted profanity from infiltrating our airwaves and urge the industry to
make this routine practice. Their actions, however, can and must not stop there.
Finally, like the broadcasters, I have challenged the cable industry to engage
and educate the public about the best family-friendly programming that cable has
to offer and how best to use the technological tools available to prevent those
channels and programs that are inappropriate for children from reaching their
eyes and ears. I have asked all interested parties to inform me of their
progress on this front within the next thirty days. Commissioner Abernathy's
leadership in developing the FCC's Parent's Page is an important beginning in
these efforts.
The rise of cable and satellite programming and the development of new broadcast
networks have brought our citizens the very best television and radio
programming that it has had to offer in its seventy-five year history. We have
also, however, seen some of the worst. The time has come for us to work
collectively-the Commission, the Congress, the industry and the public to keep
the seedy worst of television from reaching our children and to help parents
make the choices that are best for them. I commit to you that this Commission
will continue to put our resources into vigorously enforcing our indecency
rules. I urge Congress to assist us in these efforts and look for the industry
to step up and do its part to protect our nation's children. I look forward to
working together with my Commission colleagues to advance the public interest on
these important issues.
Thank you, I will be happy to answer any of your questions.
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