PTC Joins Congressmen and FCC
Chairman to Announce Details of New
Bill
WASHINGTON, DC (June 14, 2007) – The
Parents Television Council™ praised U.S. Reps.
Dan Lipinski (D-IL) and Jeff Fortenberry (R-NE) for
their introduction of legislation called the “Family
and Consumer Choice Act
of 2007,” designed to provide families
with the ability choose and pay for only the cable
networks they want. The PTC’s Director of Corporate
and Government Affairs Dan Isett joined the
Congressmen and FCC Chairman Kevin Martin in
announcing their support at a news conference today.
“Last year, Congress acted to increase the maximum
possible fine for violation of broadcast decency
law, but the reaction from the entertainment
industry was to file suit, claiming that the
‘F-word’ and ‘S-word’ were appropriate to air during
prime time television, and that – of all things – a
striptease in the middle of the Super Bowl was
somehow not indecent. Clearly, the entertainment
industry has lost its way, and is failing to live up
to its legal obligation to broadcast in the public
interest,” said Mr. Isett.
“Last week, the U.S. Second Circuit Court of Appeals
rendered a decision inexplicable to Americans
families: that the ‘F-word’ and ‘S-word’ should be
ok to be broadcast on the public airwaves at hours
when tens of millions of children are in the
audience. While we’re a long way from the end of
the judicial process in that case, and Congress may
weigh in yet again, one thing is clear – if the
entertainment industry really want to give parents
‘complete control’ of their televisions, as it says
it does, then it would endorse the concept of cable
choice.
“In its decision, the court cited the growing areas
of graphic content on cable as justification for its
ruling – but what about the millions of Americans
who choose not to take cable in order to avoid that
type of programming?
“Let’s be very clear: what is being proposed today
is the creation of a free market in cable
programming which does not exist today.
“Cable content is controlled by a handful of
powerful media conglomerates who for years have
extorted money from subscribers by creating new
channels, adding them to expanded basic cable tiers,
and forcing subscribers to pay for them – whether
they wanted those new channels or not. Because
cable customers have no ability to make a
market-based decision, programming costs have no
bearing on what consumers actually want. This
results in subscription fees increasing at several
times the rate of inflation.
“Cable subscribers pay on average nearly nine
dollars a year for each cable channel coming into
their home -- $9.60 per year for MTV, $9.00 per year
for FX, and $7.20 per year for Comedy Central –
multiplied by over 80 million cable subscribers, and
it quickly adds up to hundreds of millions of
dollars per year per network directly into the
pockets of Viacom, News Corp., and other media
giants. What do cable subscribers get in return?
Here are just a couple of examples from this week
alone:
-
“Last night Season 4 of
Rescue Me
debuted on the FX network. In addition to intensely
graphic violence, incredibly explicit sexual content
and frequent obscene language, the previous three
seasons have featured four scenes depicting sexual
violence, rape or sexual assault without
consequences either for the victim or the
assailant. In one particularly disturbing scene,
after a heated argument with his ex-wife, the ‘hero’
shoves her onto the couch and rapes her. At first
she fights him off, but in the middle of the
assault, she is shown to be enjoying the rape.
-
“This weekend Comedy Central is airing
the South Park ‘Dirty Dozen’ – the twelve ‘most
foul-mouthed, filthiest and sexually offensive
episodes ever.’ This includes the episode that used
the ‘S-word’ 162 times, an episode in which a
character watches his father masturbate, and an
episode in which a teacher demonstrates to his
elementary school class how to insert a gerbil into
a man’s rectum.
“The PTC has no problem with adults who make the
affirmative choice to choose and pay for content
like this. The ultra-violent Sopranos finale
on Sunday night enjoyed a relatively large audience,
and was only available to cable subscribers who
chose to take HBO. What’s at issue today is whether
millions of cable subscribers should be forced to
pay for content like The Sopranos – which is
now being shown on the A&E network in the expanded
basic tier – just to get access to the quality
family, news and sports programming that exists on
cable.
“We commend Congressman Lipinski and Congressman
Fortenberry for their excellent leadership on this
critical issue, and we thank Chairman Martin for his
thoughtful and forthright determination that parents
must be given more and better tools to control the
graphic sexual and violent content that comes into
their homes. It takes real political fortitude to
side with families and stand up to the millions of
dollars the entertainment industry spends to buy
influence in Washington. But make no mistake - the
American people are grateful that this legislation
is being offered today.”