By
Bryan Oberle
Erie Times News
September 22, 2008
When you have a lively
6-year-old running around the house with a television set on in
virtually every room, it's obviously up to Mom and Dad to monitor
what's on.
We get it: Young Nicole's eyes
and ears shouldn't be exposed to certain TV programming. She doesn't
get to watch "Desperate Housewives."
That position should keep the
Federal Communications Commission off our backs, but don't bet on it.
Maybe you missed it, but the
FCC's effort to punish CBS and intimidate broadcast and cable
television networks into proper behavior was appropriately smacked down
by a Federal Appeals Court back in late July.
Who even remembers the
controversy? Back at halftime during CBS' Super Bowl XXXVIII telecast
on Feb. 1, 2004, singer Janet Jackson's bare breast was briefly
exposed. Judging from the subsequent uproar, you'd have thought all the
little Johns and Janes who witnessed Jackson's wickedness were
emotionally scarred for life.
The FCC decided an immediate
crackdown on "indecency" in broadcasting was warranted and nailed CBS
with a record $550,000 fine.
One small problem: The FCC
violated its own rules with that excessive fine. A three-judge panel of
the 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that the FFC "acted
arbitrarily and capriciously" in issuing the fine for the fleeting
image of nudity. And the court found that the FCC deviated from its
nearly 30-year practice of fining indecent broadcast programming only
when it was so "pervasive as to amount to 'shock treatment' for the
audience."
Some Americans want the
federal government to compel the broadcast networks to protect
children's ears from foul language, sexual content and bloody violence.
And the FCC wants Congress to grant the agency that power.
Don't worry grownups. That
isn't going to happen.
Most Americans believe it's
far better for parents to protect their children from potential TV
evils and leave the actual programming up to the networks.
In our house, where
televisions are constantly running, this isn't an issue. When Nicole's
mother is watching the Food Network or a "CSI" episode, Nicole is
watching "SpongeBob SquarePants."
The sets I have on are almost
exclusively devoted to sports. When a football game isn't available,
old movies from TMC or sitcom repeats from TV Land are airing. Nicole
is acquiring quite an appreciation for "The Andy Griffith Show."
Obviously, there are shows
children shouldn't be exposed to in America's living rooms. That's why
Nicole won't be watching "The Sopranos" for years to come in ours.
It seems basic enough: If you
don't want your little darlings watching and hearing adult language and
themes, do something about it. Monitor what your kids watch.
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