TV violence under fire in US
CHICAGO - The graphic torture and death scenes popular shows may soon come under government fire in de the US.
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Audiostream:
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The Federal Communications Commission, which released its long-awaited recommendations on TV violence last week, is strongly urging that Congress can and should regulate the degree of violence that can be shown during prime-time hours. The FCC has also proposed to regulate cable TV for the first time, attempting to reduce the market for violent images by requiring cable companies to offer consumers more flexibility in which channels they choose to purchase.
While such regulation may prove politically popular, it will be a tough sell to the courts, experts say. „There is very little chance that a bill attempting to define violence and regulate it would ever pass constitutional muster”, says Clay Calvert, codirector of the Pennsylvania Center for the First Amendment at Pennsylvania State University. „It would be a huge shift for (the FCC) to regulate content on cable and satellite, and this is probably not the best issue to do it on.... Violence is going to be even harder to define than indecency.”
Despite that, many advocates say that evidence of harmful effects of media violence on children, combined with a significant increase in the degree of violence that makes it over the air waves, means that the government needs to try.
Sen. John Rockefeller (D) of West Virginia commended the report and said he’ll introduce legislation within the next few weeks that may incorporate some of the FCC’s suggestions. Other parent advocates acknowledge that such laws can be incredibly difficult to enforce but say that a discussion about the issue is vital.
„We’re not talking about car chases and shoot’em-up scenes, we’re talking about graphic depictions of rape and torture”, says Dan Isett, director of corporate and government affairs for the Parents Television Council (PTC). A recent PTC study showed that there had been a 75 percent increase in violence on prime-time network programming since 1998, he notes. (The Christian Science Monitor)