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Media Regulations - opinions?
today I was suprised to actually read a good article in the opinion section of our campus newspaper. It got me thinking about the topic and i wanted to post it here to get feedback from some of you...
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OWNING THE NEWS
Scott Monk
April 24, 2003
America is witnessing one of the most anxious and critical times in all its 227-year history, and although affairs overseas happen to be the topic of the month, pressing domestic issues do not just roll over and play dead during times of war. Arguably, the decision that will shape the American way of life in coming years will be made by late June, when the Federal Communications Commission will decide whether to eliminate or modify six seemingly innocuous media ownership rules. The impact could be colossal.
Michael Powell, chairman of the FCC, has made it known that he favors eliminating these restrictions, which would usher in a new wave of massive media mergers by striking down long-standing safeguards against media monopolization. Up for reevaluation, according to www.pbs.org/now, are the following six rules: the Broadcast-Newspaper Cross-Ownership Prohibition (1975), which bans ownership of a newspaper and a television station in the same market; the National Television Ownership Rule (1941), stating that a broadcaster cannot own television stations that reach more than 35 percent of the nation's homes; the Dual Network Rule (1946), which prohibits any entity from owning more than one major television network; the Local Television Ownership Rule (1964), prohibiting a broadcaster from owning more than one of the top four stations in a single market; the Local Radio Ownership Rule (1941), limiting the number of radio stations any one entity can own in a single marke, and the Television-Radio Cross-Ownership Rule (1970), which limits the number of television and radio stations a single entity can own in any given market.
If these rules are struck down, democracy cannot survive without the diversity of ideas presented by a truly free press. According to United States Senators Wayne Allard, R-CO, Susan Collins, R-ME, and Olympia Snowe, R-ME, it may not.
In a letter to Powell calling for a broader public debate in the FCC's media ownership review, the senators contend, "the mass media provide the news and information that the citizens of this country use to participate in our democratic society. A fully functioning democracy depends on media sources with diverse voices and opinions as well as content relevant to local communities."
According to the media watchdog group "Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting," America's once diverse media are increasingly being monopolized through mergers and media consolidation. Six companies -- Disney, AOL Time Warner, Vivendi Corporation, General Electric, News Corp and Viacom -- now own a hefty majority of media outlets. Deregulation will only give these corporate giants uninhibited rule over the marketplace and severely limit the ability of journalists to be independent. As America's window to the world grows increasingly narrow and falls into the hands of fewer people, independent, objective and unbiased journalism will get squeezed out of the picture, and society's perception of reality becomes severely distorted. A glaring example is the war coverage around the globe. The media tend to mirror the stance of their respective government, sifting out information not conforming to that view. Thus, several different wars were being fought at one time; depending on what country and on what channel it was being watched.
On Feb.17, the Project for Excellence in Journalism, a non-partisan research group, in collaboration with Princeton Survey Research Associates, released a five-year study on media consolidation and quality. It concluded, "Overall, the data strongly suggest regulatory changes that encourage heavy concentration of ownership in local television by a few large corporations will erode the quality of news Americans receive."
Of course, to pay for the staggering costs of mergers, media moguls must bombard consumers with a barrage of cross-media promotions, and as their pervasiveness into every facet of our lives intensifies, so too does their influence on government, politics and pop culture.
Fortunately, the FCC has allowed a public comment period up until June 2, during which it has requested the public weigh in on the issue. Public comments can be made on the FCC Web site, at www.fcc.gov/ownership. It will use the public opinion as a deciding factor in its decision.
If all of this is news to the public, think about it. Shouldn't the public be aware of it? The very media responsible for providing everyday Americans with information important to their daily lives have a valuable stake in not letting the public know this.
http://www.thebatt.com/vnews/displa...4/3ea78fb66abab
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Now obviously this has to do with the regulations imposed on the media here in the USA. my question is whether you agree with the article or not? are you for the current media regulations which promote diversity or are do you favor a more laisse fair approach which promotes complete freedom of press. im still kinda on the fence but since in economy i prefer laisse fair, i might be tempted to agree with Michael Powell in removing the 6 government regulations.
what do you guys think?
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If God is the answer, it must have been a very stupid question.
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