03-24-2004, 01:11 PM | #41 (permalink) | ||
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In other words, in your own post you basically say there are a ton of lazy parents who let the media raise their kids for them because they're too lazy and fucking dumb to do it themselves. So if we censor Stern and a little sex talk, what exactly is being fixed? Absofuckinglutely nothing...... Quote:
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03-24-2004, 01:17 PM | #43 (permalink) |
Banned
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You can scream I'm blaming T.V. all you want but you fail to comprehend what I'm saying.
Go back and read it again. It's called common decency. Maybe you feel like it's ok for children of any age to have easy access to porn based tripe and perverted lewd acts but I happen to not. You're a mod .....why do you people censor negativity ? Because it's not benefitial to the society as a whole. It's the same principle. Only with public access, 5 year olds who are easily impressed or manipluated can view it. I find that more disturbing than the F.C.C. trying to tone the negative unbenefitial crap down or restrict some content for young children. Adult entertainment should be for adults. It's about Goddamned time they did something in my opinion. I'm done with this thread. Last edited by Surfer; 03-24-2004 at 01:27 PM.. |
03-24-2004, 01:29 PM | #44 (permalink) | |
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Location: Somewhere in Ohio
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Lastly, do you realize that The Stern Show is on during school hours? Kinda hard for kids to listen to that, isn't it? |
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03-24-2004, 01:30 PM | #45 (permalink) |
Banned
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right
and porn, lewd acts and stupid shock antics for public access so that all ages can view or listen to isn't directed at anyone wanting standards for unmonitored public viewing to try and help our children through examples of good behavior and positive reinforcement on how to succeed is just stupid christian morals like thou shall not kill it has nothing to do with common decency or common morals let's show the young kiddies that it's cool,funny and hip to be a drug addicted thug or a star by using juvenile perverted cheap shock antics lets just blame the parents and allow lewd perverted behavior to be easily accessed and viewed by children regardless of age the hell with the kiddies if their parents can't follow them around every minute of their lives it's just stupid christian morals yep I'm done Last edited by Surfer; 03-24-2004 at 02:00 PM.. |
04-04-2004, 08:09 AM | #48 (permalink) | |
Apocalypse Nerd
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04-04-2004, 11:59 AM | #49 (permalink) |
Cosmically Curious
Location: Chicago, IL
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When I first heard about the Howard Stern / Opera debate, I was all for Opera being fined to support Stern's point. But as I read this article, it only makes it all too clear that censorship has gotten way out of hand, and soon the only thing we'll be allowed to watch is children's shows. Yes, there should be some limitations on whats allowed on TV, but human beings are perfectly capable of deciding what is or is not appropriate for themselves and their family, without the FCC telling them so.
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04-04-2004, 01:59 PM | #50 (permalink) |
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Location: Chicago
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Exactly. The whole point of wanting Oprah to be fined is that (theoretically at least) there would be a bit of a public outcry of your typical Oprah watcher who recognizes that she should not be banned. However, if the FCC is also going to be targeting soap operas, it seems to me that maybe they really could care less about whatever kind of public outcry there might be.
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04-04-2004, 02:02 PM | #51 (permalink) |
Tilted Cat Head
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Onodrim please remember that the "censoring" stuff only applies to broadcast TV and radio. Anything that is subscriber based has different rules.
Thus Comedy Central can get away with saying Shit on South Park, XM can have Playboy Radio. So the tenents of Stern vs. Oprah is that it has to be even across the board for broadcasters. Cable channels and pay radio do not apply.
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04-04-2004, 03:24 PM | #52 (permalink) | |
slightly impaired
Location: Down South
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I like to thread-skip as much as the next guy but in an election year, you will not find ANY party looking to be elected who is going to stir this pot of shit. Why would Kerry act any differently on this than Bush has? Both want to be President in November. Other than the fact that he is currently president, I don't know what Bush personally has done as far as being involved in any of the latest FCC stinks. It just seemed like a big jump in logic to me. |
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04-20-2004, 12:44 PM | #53 (permalink) | |
Tilted Cat Head
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04-20-2004, 01:34 PM | #54 (permalink) | |
Fly em straight!
Location: Above and Beyond
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I already wrote to the FCC and detailed how I find their witch hunt of Stern a complete farce when they let things like Oprah slide right on by. Janet should have kept her tit indoors!
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04-20-2004, 01:46 PM | #55 (permalink) | |
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Doh!!!! -Homer Simpson |
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04-20-2004, 07:30 PM | #56 (permalink) |
slightly impaired
Location: Down South
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Directly from the FCC.gov website:
Summary The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) is an independent United States government agency, directly responsible to Congress. The FCC answers to congress. The president can appoint commissioners (if their existing 5 year terms are up) but only 3 can be from the same party. The president can and does push his own agendas on lots of things, but implying that he has total control over FCC witch hunts is just stretching it a bit for me. Thinking that either party would change what is going on and risk their election chances stretches it a bit further. YMMV |
04-26-2004, 05:05 PM | #57 (permalink) | |
Apocalypse Nerd
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The president has, and always will direct policy of the Federal Branch of government.
The latest news: Stern will be censored Oprah will not: Quote:
Last edited by Astrocloud; 04-26-2004 at 05:07 PM.. |
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05-13-2004, 01:18 PM | #58 (permalink) |
Apocalypse Nerd
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Kerry’s Secret Weapon?
Hundreds of thousands of swing-state radio listeners may turn the unlikely Howard Stern into a presidential kingmaker by Ross Douthat ..... Though much has been made of the recent debut of Al Franken as a liberal talk-radio host, the most important political voice on talk radio this year may turn out to be not Franken but the usually apolitical "shock jock" Howard Stern. Recent months have not been kind to Stern, who found himself a target of the backlash against indecency that followed the baring of Janet Jackson's nipple during the Super Bowl halftime show. In February the radio behemoth Clear Channel Communications dropped him from six of its affiliates for being "vulgar, offensive and insulting." The following month the FCC slapped him with a $27,500 fine for his on-air discussions of sexual techniques such as the "nasty Sanchez" and the "blumpkin" (don't ask). As Congress considers raising obscenity fines as high as $500,000, Stern is contemplating a move to satellite radio, where the FCC couldn't touch him. The proudly boorish host has cast himself as the target of a Republican vendetta—sparked by his criticism of President Bush and spearheaded by Clear Channel (whose CEO is a Bush family friend). So Stern is fighting back, proclaiming "radio jihad" on Bush's re-election campaign and partly remaking his show—well known for its adolescent obsession with fart jokes, lesbians, and strippers—into a platform for anti-Republican invective. "Remember me in November when you're in the voting booth," Stern tells listeners. "I'm asking you to do me one favor. Vote against Bush. That's it." The idea of Howard Stern as presidential kingmaker may seem absurd on its face. But Stern has successfully dabbled in politics before. In 1994 he launched a Libertarian Party candidacy for governor of New York, only to quit the race and endorse George Pataki, a Republican, over the incumbent, Mario Cuomo. Stern was polling at six percent before he dropped out, and several political observers believed that his endorsement helped Pataki pull off a narrow win. The previous year Stern had endorsed the Republican candidate Christine Todd Whitman for governor of New Jersey, on the condition that Whitman name a rest stop after him if elected. Sure enough, Whitman upset the Democratic incumbent, Jim Florio—and today the Howard Stern Rest Area graces Interstate 290 just east of Burlington City, New Jersey. Both those races took place within Stern's home market. But with eight million weekly listeners, Stern also has a larger national audience than any radio host other than Rush Limbaugh, Sean Hannity, or Dr. Laura Schlessinger (the majority of whose listeners presumably tend to be Republican). Stern could sway many undecided voters, according to Michael Harrison, of Talkers magazine, a nonpartisan periodical that surveys radio listener demographics. Harrison says that Stern has "a gigantic audience of thirty- to fortysomethings, people who have grown up with him, people who are teachers, accountants, lawyers." Several million of them "would say they lean conservative ... but are on the fence" in this race. And the host has tremendous credibility with his listeners. "He may be raunchy, edgy, dirty," Harrison says, "but he's compulsively honest, and his main target is hypocrisy." Also, it's not hard to imagine that Stern's relentless screeds against the President would compel some of the previously nonvoting members of his audience—people whom political campaigns usually ignore—to turn out for John Kerry. In a closely divided country it may not take many votes to tilt the electoral playing field. Ohio, for instance, went for Bush by fewer than 200,000 votes in 2000, and is up for grabs this fall. Stern's broadcasts in Cincinnati and Columbus reach a total of 138,000 listeners a week, according to Arbitron, an independent firm that tracks radio audiences. Missouri and Pennsylvania are also swing states; his show reaches 139,000 in St. Louis and 358,000 in Philadelphia. In Florida, the fiercest battleground in 2000, the Clear Channel purge cost Stern audiences in Fort Lauderdale and Orlando—which is fodder for Bush-Clear Channel conspiracy theorists. But even now Stern's show reaches 38,000 people a week in Fort Myers—seventy times Bush's Florida margin in 2000. In short, it's not inconceivable that Stern could swing a state or two into Kerry's column. http://www.theatlantic.com/issues/2004/06/douthat.htm |
05-14-2004, 04:38 AM | #59 (permalink) |
Junkie
Location: NJ
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The problem with the theory that Stern will really influence this election is that I suspect a good portion of his listeners don't even vote. The ones who are voters most likely will not take political advice from him and the ones who will do him the favor of voting against Bush will likely be in states like New York and California where Bush probably won't win anyway.
Stern is out for ratings and this "poor me the FCC doesn't like me" is what got him ratings to begin with. Now that his ratings are falling, he's pulling that trick out of his bag again. I suspect it has/will help his ratings but it won't influence the election.
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05-14-2004, 04:55 AM | #60 (permalink) | |
Apocalypse Nerd
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05-14-2004, 05:11 AM | #61 (permalink) | |
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Location: NJ
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I'm saying that I'm sure he feels "unfairly persecuted" but am also sure that he's using the situation to improve his ratings.
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05-14-2004, 05:35 AM | #62 (permalink) |
Apocalypse Nerd
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It's called selective enforcement. If someone is Pro-Bush or just politically neutral -then the FCC does nothing. Even if the words used are in clear violation. That's why they won't go after the documentary where 9/11 firefighters say "fuck" and that's why Oprah will not be fined.
However when someone who is critical of the Bush regime goes into the "grey area" -then the book is thrown at them. However, it seems politically unfathomable now -because Stern has been such a critic of the FCC. If they silence him now it will seem like they did it just to shut him up. |
05-14-2004, 05:44 AM | #63 (permalink) |
Tilted Cat Head
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Location: Manhattan, NY
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selective enforcement and/or selective censorship.
Those people who live in the FL state no longer can hear his opinions, thus he has effectively been censored from a Floridians point of view. also, his base that are voters, did make a difference in two NorthEastern elections for NY Gov. Pataki, and for NJ Gov. Christie Todd Whitman.
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05-14-2004, 05:55 AM | #64 (permalink) | |
Junkie
Location: NJ
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There's nothing stopping another station from picking up Stern so it's not censorship. He is still free to say whatever he wants and he does so. There are countless ways he could get his show back on the air in the areas where he is no longer heard whether he chooses to do so or not is not the fault of the government or Clearchannel.
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