Politics & Government
F-Bombs OK? FCC Asks If It Should Ease Swearing, Nudity Ban
Lake Zurich residents have begun to weigh in.
Should the Federal Communications Commission lighten up on enforcing its ban on swear words and nudity on broadcast media?
The agency has proposed doing just that — letting "fleeting" violations slide and enforcing its rules only for "egregious" offenses.
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The FCC invited comments for 60 days on the enforcement change in an April 1, 2013 announcement (click on PDF thumbnail).
Lake Zurich resident Josh Thompson is among those who have submitted comments against the proposed change. A portion of his comment reads:
Find out what's happening in Lake Zurichfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
"As a parent, it is harder and harder to protect our children from those in this world that find profanity, nudity and explicit behaviour from them. I understand that with parental controls we can protect them in our homes, but what about everywhere else in public?"
As of April 15, no Lake Zurich residents have commented in favor of the FCC change.
Comments submitted to the FCC are public. You can see them by searching a comment database at the FCC website.
The Minnesota Family Council sent an email April 9 (click on PDF thumbnail) asking people to submit comments such as: "I oppose any changes to the current FCC indecency standards that would allow television and radio stations to broadcast expletives and nudity on the public airwaves, even if brief or 'fleeting.'”
Would you like the FCC to ease its enforcement of indecency rules on TV and radio broadcasters? Leave a comment below.
Click on the YouTube thumbnail (or visit YouTube.com) for an example of the "fleeting expletives" behind the U.S. Supreme Court case cited by the FCC. It's Cher at the 2002 Billboard Music Awards (6:00 mark — profanity warning).
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