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Politics : Libertarian Discussion Forum -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: freeus who wrote (4572)12/30/2000 8:42:42 AM
From: The Street  Respond to of 13060
 
FCC Chastises Networks for Drug Czar's Media Campaign, NORML
Complaint Brings Victory
drcnet.org

"WARNING: This program contains material lobbying for support of
current drug policies, paid for at taxpayer expense."

While viewers of "The Drew Carey Show" or "America's Most Wanted"
may never see that admonition flash on their TV screens, the FCC
wants them to know when the government is attempting to sway
them. Ruling on a complaint filed by the National Organization
for the Reform of Marijuana Laws (NORML), the Federal
Communications Commission (FCC) this week ordered the major
networks to begin identifying the Office of National Drug Control
Policy (ONDCP) as a sponsor of shows that include anti-drug
messages underwritten by the federal government.

In 1997, Congress appropriated a billion dollars for a five-year
anti-drug advertising campaign run by ONDCP. In the past two
years, in a complicated programming-for-ad-time swap, the major
networks took in $25 million from the government for placing
anti-drug messages in a number of prime-time programs. ONDCP
admitted to Congress to reviewing scripts for more than a hundred
episodes of different programs to see if their anti-drug messages
met government approval. But neither the networks nor the drug
warriors told viewers that federal employees were helping to
shape their favorite programs.

That arrangement, and similar ones with the film and publishing
industries, blossomed into a national scandal after Salon's Dan
Forbes first exposed them almost a year ago. That's when NORML
jumped in. It filed a complaint with the FCC arguing that
failing to identify the drug czar's office as a sponsor of the
programs violated long-standing FCC disclosure rules.

The federal regulators agreed. In its ruling, the FCC cited
sponsorship regulations in place since 1927 that state that
viewers "are entitled to know by whom they are being persuaded."

"The language of the statute is very broad, requiring sponsorship
identification if any type of valuable consideration is directly
or indirectly paid or promised, charged or accepted," said the
ruling.

NORML Executive Director Keith Stroup told the Washington Post he
was pleased, but that the ruling did not go far enough. It did
not address the troublesome question of whether the government
should be supporting a specific public policy position in prime-
time programs, he said.

"We have been told by these programmers that they have influenced
the programs in order to please the government. That is not the
kind of free press we have grown accustomed to," Stroup said.

Still, Stroup was "reasonably happy," he told Newsday.

"It puts the incoming drug czar on notice," he said. "At least
the next time around, if they're going to spend taxpayer money to
try to influence the content of programming, that fact is going
to have to be included on the programming."

Neither the networks nor the drug czar's office have commented on
the ruling. The networks could have faced fines for violating
FCC regulations.