It seems like only yesterday that I was sitting on my buddy’s couch during Super Bowl XXXVIII, elbow deep in a bowl of homemade salsa, when he jabbed me in the ribs and said “dude, did you just see that?”
The “that” in question was the now infamous “wardrobe malfunction” endured by pop star Janet Jackson during the halftime show.
She is going to be in so much trouble, said my friend.
As it turned out, CBS, the network which broadcast the game that year took the brunt of the blame as people across the nation immediately called for a crackdown on broadcast indecency.
But on July 21, the U.S. Appeals Court for the Third Circuit overturned a $550,000 fine against CBS imposed by the Federal Communications Commission for the 2004 incident viewed by an estimated 90 million viewers.
In it’s ruling, the court stated that the FCC’s decision to fine CBS for broadcasting Jackson’s semi-exposed breast for nine-sixteenths of a second was “arbitrary and capricious,” because it deviated from the agency’s longstanding policy of penalizing broadcasters for “indecent material so pervasive as to amount to ‘shock treatment’ for the audience.”
Bravo to the court for recognizing the snafu for what it was – an oversight and not a “willful action” as claimed by the FCC.
Anyone who has navigated a broadcast television lineup lately can trip over a bevy of imagery aimed at alienating and attracting viewers at the same time. Why single out an instance which I suspect most people did not even witness live.
4 Comments on This Article
1
"She is going to be in so much trouble, said my friend. "
Sad that it wasn't "THEY are going to be in so much trouble". That breast didn't fall out by itself.
Comment Byangela Wednesday, July 23, 2008 at 10:46 PM
2
"Decency rules" in this instance (not all) are arbitrary, narrow, counter-productive, ignorant, and a few other things. The FCC was not created to be the state's censor, nor to allow it to kill much good work on basic channels because producers are afraid an autocratic bunch of body-phobic prudes will capriciously try to put them out of business. Comment ByDr. Paul Rapoport Wednesday, July 23, 2008 at 6:49 PM
3
Now if only we could return sports to what it really is...and halftime to what it really is. We are overpaying athletes, networks, and professional teams while underpaying teachers, public service officials, and others we rely on for our future. Bridges woudn't collapse if we came to expect the same level of professionalism from city engineers as we do those engineers responsible for creating Micro-processors, and our kids would learn a lot more if we paid teachers and school officials a wage commensurate with their overwhelming responsibilities. Let's stop the madness! No more half-time shows, no more expensiove commercials. Let's pay each professional athlete $250,000 per year, and every teach $250,000 per year. Comment ByJim O Wednesday, July 23, 2008 at 3:54 PM
4
Two wrongs do not make it right. Court should fine both, CBS and FCC officials for not enforcing decency rules on all TV coverage. Comment ByMark Anderson Wednesday, July 23, 2008 at 3:50 PM
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