Thursday, April 21, 2005

Broadcast executives pledge indecency code

AP reports that "As support grows for a crackdown on overly sexual TV programming, broadcasters are working to develop tough voluntary guidelines they hope will stall government regulation." Of course the long time code of best practice subscribed to by all of the broadcasters back when broadcast was all there was worked very well until it was thrown out by the U.S. government in a moment of bone-headedly expansionist interpretation of the antitrust laws. While this will have little effect on the avalanche of raunchy and violent material that comes into homes over cable and the internet as well as DVDs and video games, there is still some merit in having those providers who operate under a license of the public airways to avoid bad surprises.

2 comments:

NMM said...

Hey, it's a cool blog and you are a great reviewer! I do also review, theatre in my case, for a Mexican paper, and know how hard job can get. Will be back regularly from now. Greetings from Ciudad de México.

Salut.

Nell Minow said...

Joe, I understand the point you are making. But the reason that broadcast channels have always been subject to the requirement that they operate "in the public interest, convenience, and necessity" is "scarcity." The government licenses the airwaves because (1) they cannot be owned by any private entity and (2) there are not enough places on the spectrum for anyone who wants one. Anyone can start a newspaper (or a blog), so there is no role for the government to play with regard to the content. Between the First Amendment and the free market, between Hustler, The National Enquirer, The National Review, and the New York Times, things sort themselves out. If we awarded broadcast licenses according to the free market, just auctioning them all off to the highest bidder, the world would be controlled by Rupert Murdoch (even more than it already is). If you could show me an example of a successful boycott in response to any failure of a media outlet to act responsibly, I might be persuadable. But keep in mind, speaking of the New York Times, compare the Times, the Washington Post, and the Wall Street Journal, all controlled not by the free market but by the families that have run them for generations, to the "free market" newspapers like the NY Post. The market is ideal for determining many things; just not all things.