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Full-Text Articles in Law

Institutionalized Word Taboo: The Continuing Saga Of Fcc Indecency Regulation, Christopher M. Fairman Feb 2013

Institutionalized Word Taboo: The Continuing Saga Of Fcc Indecency Regulation, Christopher M. Fairman

Christopher M Fairman

Indecency regulation by the Federal Communication Commission and Supreme Court is the product of word taboo—the subconscious, emotional, involuntary avoidance of certain words out of fear that some harm will occur if they are spoken. Acting in tandem, the Court and the Commissioners create institutionalized word taboo based upon the assumption that broadcast media’s pervasive and intrusive presence into the home endangers unsupervised children. Technological innovation renders this premise invalid today, but institutionalized word taboo remains. This article (1) traces the rise of indecency regulation, (2) explains the invalidity of the assumptions used to justify it, (3) introduces word taboo …


The Journalism Ratings Board: An Incentive-Based Approach To Cable News Accountability, Andrew Selbst Feb 2011

The Journalism Ratings Board: An Incentive-Based Approach To Cable News Accountability, Andrew Selbst

University of Michigan Journal of Law Reform

The American establishment media is in crisis. With newsmakers primarily driven by profit, sensationalism and partisanship shape news coverage at the expense of information necessary for effective self-government. Focused on cable news in particular this Note proposes a Journalism Ratings Board to periodically rate news programs based on principles of good journalism. The Board will publish periodic reports and display the news programs' ratings during the programs themselves, similar to parental guidelines for entertainment programs. In a political and legal climate hostile to command-and-control regulation, such an incentive-based approach will help cable news fulfill the democratic function of the press.


Plurality Of Political Opinion And The Concentration Of Media In The United States, William B. Fisch Jan 2010

Plurality Of Political Opinion And The Concentration Of Media In The United States, William B. Fisch

Faculty Publications

This paper reviews regulatory efforts of the U.S. federal govern- ment to promote viewpoint diversity in broadcast media (radio, television, cable, and satellite) in the face of increasing concentration of ownership of such media, and the impact on such efforts of the free- doms of speech and press embodied in the First Amendment to the federal constitution. With respect to this issue, the regulatory work has been done overwhelmingly by the Federal Communications Commis- sion, operating under an act of Congress which has been amended from time to time to push the FCC in particular directions. The anti- trust laws …


Attorney Advertising Over The Broadcast Media, I. Terry Currie Apr 1979

Attorney Advertising Over The Broadcast Media, I. Terry Currie

Vanderbilt Law Review

This Note will examine the first amendment issues that broadcast attorney advertising raises. The Note will begin with a general discussion of the analytical approach adopted by the Supreme Court in freedom of speech and commercial speech cases. Next, the Note will explore the "special problems" and unique characteristics of the broadcast media as they relate to the interests affected by broadcast attorney advertising, concluding that the benefits afforded to consumers outweigh the potential risks created by such advertising. The Note will also briefly consider various regulations on broadcast advertising adopted by the bar at both the state and federal …


Legal Restrictions On Ownership Of The Mass Media, Michael Botein Jan 1977

Legal Restrictions On Ownership Of The Mass Media, Michael Botein

Books

No abstract provided.


Sanders Brothers Revisited: Protection Of Broadcasters From The Consequences Of Economic Competition, Jacob W. Mayer Jan 1961

Sanders Brothers Revisited: Protection Of Broadcasters From The Consequences Of Economic Competition, Jacob W. Mayer

Kentucky Law Journal

No abstract provided.