Click here for Adobe Acrobat version
Click here for Microsoft Word version
********************************************************
NOTICE
********************************************************
This document was converted from Microsoft Word.
Content from the original version of the document such as
headers, footers, footnotes, endnotes, graphics, and page numbers
will not show up in this text version.
All text attributes such as bold, italic, underlining, etc. from the
original document will not show up in this text version.
Features of the original document layout such as
columns, tables, line and letter spacing, pagination, and margins
will not be preserved in the text version.
If you need the complete document, download the
Microsoft Word or Adobe Acrobat version.
*****************************************************************
STATEMENT OF
CHAIRMAN KEVIN J. MARTIN
Re: Complaints Against Various Television Licensees Concerning Their
February 1, 2004 Broadcast of the Super Bowl XXXVIII Halftime Show;
Complaints Regarding Various Television Broadcasts Between February 2,
2002 and March 8, 2005; Complaints Against Various Television Licensees
Concerning Their December 31, 2004 Broadcast of the Program "Without A
Trace"
Congress has long prohibited the broadcasting of indecent and profane
material and the courts have upheld challenges to these standards. But the
number of complaints received by the Commission has risen year after year.
They have grown from hundreds, to hundreds of thousands. And the number of
programs that trigger these complaints continues to increase as well. I
share the concerns of the public - and of parents, in particular - that
are voiced in these complaints.
I believe the Commission has a legal responsibility to respond to them and
resolve them in a consistent and effective manner. So I am pleased that
with the decisions released today the Commission is resolving hundreds of
thousands of complaints against various broadcast licensees related to
their televising of 49 different programs. These decisions, taken both
individually and as a whole, demonstrate the Commission's continued
commitment to enforcing the law prohibiting the airing of obscene,
indecent and profane material.
Additionally, the Commission today affirms its initial finding that the
broadcast of the Super Bowl XXXVIII Halftime Show was actionably indecent.
We appropriately reject the argument that CBS continues to make that this
material is not indecent. That argument runs counter to Commission
precedent and common sense.
1