Supreme Court Backs FCC Dirty-Word Ban

WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court has ruled that the FCC can penalize broadcasters for airing as little as one single expletive over the air. The decision will not affect cable TV, satellite broadcasts or the Internet, none of which is transmitted over public airwaves.

In a 5-4 decision written by Justice Antonin Scalia, the court reversed a ruling by the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals that said the FCC's decision to sanction "fleeting expletives" was arbitrary and capricious under federal law. That court decision had agreed with Fox Television stations, which broadcast the Billboard Music Awards, that such isolated utterances are not as potentially harmful to viewers as are other uses of sexual and excretory expressions long deemed "indecent" and banned by federal regulators.

"Even isolated utterances can be made in vulgar and shocking manner, and can constitute harmful first blows to children," Scalia wrote in the opinion.

Chief Justice John Roberts and Justices Anthony Kennedy, Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito joined Scalia in the majority opinion.

Dissenting were liberal Justices John Paul Stevens, David Souter, Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Stephen Breyer. In a statement by Breyer, signed by the others, they said the FCC "failed adequately to explain why it changed its indecency policy from a policy permitting a single 'fleeting use' of an expletive, to a policy that made no such exception."

The court pointed out that broadcasters can go back to the federal appeals court in New York and argue that the FCC policy violates the 1st Amendment.

The dispute followed a series of uses of forbidden words by celebrities at live broadcasts of awards shows, including Cher at the 2002 Billboard Music Awards, televised on Fox, and Bono at the 2003 Golden Globes, televised on NBC. Bono's outburst led the FCC to reverse a longstanding policy that had punished only repeated expletives and declare that a single use of certain words could be sanctioned as indecent.

The new policy was developed under FCC Chairman Kevin Martin, a George W. Bush appointee who resigned in January. With the end of Commissioner Deborah Tate's term in early January, the commission currently has two vacant seats, waiting for President Obama to make new appointments.

Related:  

Copyright © 2024 Adnet Media. All Rights Reserved. XBIZ is a trademark of Adnet Media.
Reproduction in whole or in part in any form or medium without express written permission is prohibited.

More News

Bella Rolland Toplines 'The Sex Impulse' From Sweet Sinner

Bella Rolland headlines "The Sex Impulse," the latest release from Mile High Media studio brand Sweet Sinner.

Judge Acquits Backpage Defendants of Most Charges Before 2nd Retrial

A federal judge acquitted former co-owner of Backpage.com Michael Lacey and two co-defendants on most of the counts remaining from the protracted trial launched against the website operators by the Justice Department in 2018.

Adult Time Partners With Animation Studio 3DGspot

Adult Time has signed a deal to distribute content on its streaming platform from animation studio 3DGspot.

Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp Signs Age Verification Bill Into Law

Republican Gov. Brian Kemp signed into law on Tuesday a bill that includes Georgia’s version of the age verification of adult content provisions being sponsored around the country by anti-porn religious conservative activists.

Willow Ryder, Angelina Diamanti Topline 'Lesbian Neighbor Affairs'

Willow Ryder and Angelina Diamanti headline "Lesbian Neighbor Affairs," from Girlfriends Films.

Cherie DeVille Discusses Doc Johnson Collabs in Vice TV's 'Sex Before the Internet'

2023 XBIZ Performer of the Year Cherie DeVille is featured on Vice TV’s “Sex Before the Internet,” discussing her Doc Johnson celebrity strokers in the episode “Sex Toy Empire.”

SINematica Names Silvia Dellai 'Most Valuable Performer' for April

SINematica has crowned Czech-Italian star Silvia Dellai as Most Valuable Performer for the month of April, with a spotlight scene opposite Yannick Shaft and Erik Everhard.

Aylo Asks Judge to Trim Sweeping GDP-Related Lawsuit

Aylo asked a California federal judge during a hearing on Monday to drop trafficking claims from a sweeping lawsuit brought by a former GirlsDoPorn model.

California Republicans, Democrats Team Up to Advance Age Verification for Porn

Both Republicans and Democrats in the California Assembly’s Privacy and Consumer Protection Committee voted last week to move forward a version of the age verification bills being sponsored around the country by anti-porn religious conservative activists.

Hazel Grace Debuts New Membership Site InMelanin

Hazel Grace has launched her new membership site, InMelanin.

Show More