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The Once-and-Future
Fairness Doctrine
Sarah B. Kent
Guest Lecture for
Susan Edens’ Broadcast
Journalism
• 1927: Issue broadcast licenses in the public interest
• 1949: Include controversial issues of public importance and do
so in a fair manner
– “In the Matter of Editorializing by Broadcast Licensees”
announced the Fairness Doctrine
– Duty to determine and represent the spectrum of views
– Alert anyone personally attacked in programming and give
them a chance to respond
– Broadcasters who endorse political candidates must offer
airtime to other candidates
• The Fairness Doctrine was challenged repeatedly over the years
• 1969: Red Lion Broadcasting v. FCC reached the Supreme
Court and the court ruled unanimously
– Broadcasters have First Amendment speech rights
– Government owns the spectrum and leases to broadcasters
– The FCC has the right to regulate news content
A little context: 1927
• German economy collapses
• Sacco and Vanzetti are executed
• Isadora Duncan is strangled when her
car wheel catches her silk scarf
• The first “talkie” is released
• The radio waves cease to be regulated
by the Department of Commerce
• The Federal Radio Commission
(later the FCC) is created
Radio Act of 1927
• The world/U.S. was a
crazy place
• Broadcasters were
acting in personal
interests much like
printers had been
– One person using a
printer did not affect
others access to printers
– One person using a
frequency prohibited
anyone else from using

• No one wanted
government-run radio
stations or
programming
• Very few people
wanted chaos
• Government licensed
the airwaves to
broadcasters
• License renewal was
contingent on acting
After 1927…
• 1934: Communications
Act passes; FCC is
overseeing
telecommunications
• 1941: FCC swings the
pendulum of justice
– Mayflower wants Yankee’s
license
– Editorials were personal
interests
– Personal interests don’t
pass the public interest
mandate
– Yankee lost his license,
Mayflower got it

• People were uninformed
about the issues
• Democracy cannot
function optimally with
uninformed voters
• 1946: FCC releases the
Blue Book
– Public interest = Public
issues
– Urged nonsponsored, local,
live coverage

• Broadcasters don’t
respond sufficiently
• 1949: FCC swung the
A little context: 1949
• U.S recognizes Israel’s existence
• The Lakers are still in Minnesota
• Tracy and Hepburn challenge gender roles and
relationship norms
• A first-class postage stamp costs 3 cents
• George Orwell warns us about 1984
• Milton Berle hosts the first telethon
• Coaxial cable brings tv reception to rural areas
• Pantomime Quiz Time wins the first Emmy for
Most Popular TV Program
• ABC, NBC, and CBS are practically the only
stations anyone can watch
“In the Matter of Editorializing by
Broadcast Licensees”
• Licensees had to “afford a reasonable
opportunity for the presentation of all
responsible positions on matters of sufficient
importance”
• Licensees were expected to operate in a
“framework of fairness, balance, and reasonable
limits”
– Duty to determine and represent the spectrum of
views
– Alert anyone personally attacked in programming
and give them a chance to respond to the attack in
other programming
A little context: Fairness/Unfairness
“I wonder what your basis for
comparison is” – Jareth the Goblin
King

• First Amendment – the less-than-five-minutelesson version
– State actors
– Cannot regulate content
• Time
• Place
• Manner

– And cannot restrict expression without a good
reason

• Duty to determine the spectrum of views on
controversial issues
• Duty to represent the spectrum of views
A little context: 1969
• Police raid Stonewall Inn in Greenwich
Village – riots ensue
• Bethel, NY hosts a now-infamous four-day
concert
• Steve Martin writes for the Smothers
Brothers
• Sesame Street airs for the first time
• FCC bans cigarette ads
• Warren Court (Loving v. Virginia, Griswold v.
Red Lion Broadcasting v. FCC
• A unanimous Court held the fairness doctrine
was constitutional
• Spectrum scarcity already restricted freedom
of expression
• Fairness doctrine regulations enhanced
rather than infringed the freedoms of speech
protected under the First Amendment.
– Helped keep discussions of contested issues
balanced and open
– Prevented broadcasters from using a monopoly
A little context: 1987
• People are terrified of AIDS
• No one knows where the Post-Reagan U.S.
will go
• Iraqi missiles kill 37 soldiers in the Persian
Gulf
• The Iran-Contra Affair becomes a Scandal
• Miami Herald Publishing Co. v. Tornillo
(1974)
has struck down a fairness doctrine for print
• FCC v. League of Women Voters (1984) has
FCC Stops Enforcing the Fairness
Doctrine
• Miami Herald Publishing Co. v. Tornillo, 1974
– Florida had a law similar to the Fairness Doctrine
for print media
– Court held that the law was unconstitutional
content regulation

• FCC v. League of Women Voters, 1984
– The Public Broadcasting Act of 1967 allocated
federal funds to noncommercial tv and radio but
prohibited editorializing on the stations
– Court held that the law was unconstitutional
content regulation
A little context: Apples vs.
Oranges
• Miami Herald Publishing hinged on the
notion that there was no pre-existing block to
expression in print media
• FCC v. League of Women Voters was about
The Public Broadcasting Act of 1967 telling tv
and radio stations they could not express any
opinions on controversial matters if they
received federal funds
• Free Market Advocacy . . .
– Free Market arguments trump any argument
The Beautiful Myth of the Free
Market
• If people do not like something, they are
smart enough to decide for themselves not to
support it
– If you don’t like the way they treat animals, don’t
buy their meat
– If you don’t like the politics they fund, don’t eat
there
– If you don’t like their employment policies, don’t
shop there
– If you don’t like the programming, change the
channel
The Ugly Truth about the Free
Market
• When the government does not regulate
industries, those industries do not have to tell
the truth.
– If they won’t agree with the way we treat animals,
prohibit cameras
– If they won’t agree with the politics we fund, use
a PAC
– If they won’t agree with our employment policies,
keep them private
– If they won’t agree with our stance on a
controversial issue, present it as uncontroverted
fact with no opposition
Free Market-4:Fairness
Doctrine-0
• Mark S. Fowler, Free Market Advocate, FCC
Chair
– Broadcasters have no unique role in democracy
– Owning a station doesn’t make a person a
community trustee, it makes them a market
participant (i.e., It’s all about the money, money,
money)
– Televisions are “just a toaster with pictures”
– Have to assign frequencies
• Corporate convenience has to be protected
• Public good is the public’s responsibility

• Dennis R. Patrick, Free Market Advocate,
Rematch 1: Still No Victory
• Syracuse Peace Council v. FCC, 1989,
Federal Appeals Court
– A broadcast station repeatedly ran spots for a
proposed nuclear plant
– The Peace Council requested the FCC enforce
the Fairness Doctrine and require them to also
include the arguments against the plant
– FCC ruled the Fairness Doctrine was not in the
public interest and violated the First Amendment
so they would not apply it
– Federal Appeals court noted the FCC reasoning
Rematch 2: Still No Victory
• Arkansas AFL-CIO v. FCC, 1993, Federal
Appeals Court
– AFL-CIO requested the FCC enforce the
Fairness Doctrine and require KARK to
broadcast both sides of a ballot issue
– FCC ruled they didn’t have to enforce the
Fairness Doctrine
– Federal Appeals court agreed

• The court only looked at the FCC decision to
not apply it
A little context: 2011
• Arab Spring Starts and Women Can Vote in
Saudi Arabia (in 2015)
• A Royal Wedding Joins Kate Middleton and
Prince William
• Rupert Murdoch – enough said
• Seal Team 6 Wins
• Gabrielle Giffords is Shot
• DoJ stops enforcing DoMA
• Occupy Wall Street Expands
Executive Order 13563 on
Improving Regulation and
Regulatory Review

• Rules are supposed to “protect public health,
welfare, safety, and our environment while
promoting economic growth, innovation,
competitiveness, and job creation”
• Communicate; stop making redundant and/or
inconsistent rules
• Be flexible and give people options
• Science and technology are our friends
• Look at old laws and fix them if they are
“outmoded, ineffective, insufficient, or
A little context: history repeating
• The world/U.S. is still a crazy place, and
probably always will be
• Broadcasters act in personal interests, much
like most people
• Democracy still functions best when voters
are informed
• Free Market advocates still think people can
inform themselves
• Power and information are still resources that
are
Misinformation Abounds
• In 1999, 1/5 Gallup poll
respondents said earth was at
the center of the universe
• In 2009, 49 Bush supporters
were given evidence that Bin
Laden/Afghanistan (not
Hussein/Iraq) were behind 9/11 48 of them left more certain of
the Iraq/Hussein connection to
the attack
• In 2010, a majority of tea partiers
agreed
they got a bigger tax refund, but
held firm
that Obama raised their taxes
So, life’s not fair….
… but maybe media can be
• The future of the Fairness Doctrine as a
regulation is bleak
• The future of the practice of Fair
broadcasting is up to you
• “Fantasia can arise anew, from your dreams
and wishes, Bastian.”

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The Once-and-Future Fairness Doctrine

  • 1. The Once-and-Future Fairness Doctrine Sarah B. Kent Guest Lecture for Susan Edens’ Broadcast Journalism
  • 2. • 1927: Issue broadcast licenses in the public interest • 1949: Include controversial issues of public importance and do so in a fair manner – “In the Matter of Editorializing by Broadcast Licensees” announced the Fairness Doctrine – Duty to determine and represent the spectrum of views – Alert anyone personally attacked in programming and give them a chance to respond – Broadcasters who endorse political candidates must offer airtime to other candidates • The Fairness Doctrine was challenged repeatedly over the years • 1969: Red Lion Broadcasting v. FCC reached the Supreme Court and the court ruled unanimously – Broadcasters have First Amendment speech rights – Government owns the spectrum and leases to broadcasters – The FCC has the right to regulate news content
  • 3. A little context: 1927 • German economy collapses • Sacco and Vanzetti are executed • Isadora Duncan is strangled when her car wheel catches her silk scarf • The first “talkie” is released • The radio waves cease to be regulated by the Department of Commerce • The Federal Radio Commission (later the FCC) is created
  • 4. Radio Act of 1927 • The world/U.S. was a crazy place • Broadcasters were acting in personal interests much like printers had been – One person using a printer did not affect others access to printers – One person using a frequency prohibited anyone else from using • No one wanted government-run radio stations or programming • Very few people wanted chaos • Government licensed the airwaves to broadcasters • License renewal was contingent on acting
  • 5. After 1927… • 1934: Communications Act passes; FCC is overseeing telecommunications • 1941: FCC swings the pendulum of justice – Mayflower wants Yankee’s license – Editorials were personal interests – Personal interests don’t pass the public interest mandate – Yankee lost his license, Mayflower got it • People were uninformed about the issues • Democracy cannot function optimally with uninformed voters • 1946: FCC releases the Blue Book – Public interest = Public issues – Urged nonsponsored, local, live coverage • Broadcasters don’t respond sufficiently • 1949: FCC swung the
  • 6. A little context: 1949 • U.S recognizes Israel’s existence • The Lakers are still in Minnesota • Tracy and Hepburn challenge gender roles and relationship norms • A first-class postage stamp costs 3 cents • George Orwell warns us about 1984 • Milton Berle hosts the first telethon • Coaxial cable brings tv reception to rural areas • Pantomime Quiz Time wins the first Emmy for Most Popular TV Program • ABC, NBC, and CBS are practically the only stations anyone can watch
  • 7. “In the Matter of Editorializing by Broadcast Licensees” • Licensees had to “afford a reasonable opportunity for the presentation of all responsible positions on matters of sufficient importance” • Licensees were expected to operate in a “framework of fairness, balance, and reasonable limits” – Duty to determine and represent the spectrum of views – Alert anyone personally attacked in programming and give them a chance to respond to the attack in other programming
  • 8. A little context: Fairness/Unfairness
  • 9. “I wonder what your basis for comparison is” – Jareth the Goblin King • First Amendment – the less-than-five-minutelesson version – State actors – Cannot regulate content • Time • Place • Manner – And cannot restrict expression without a good reason • Duty to determine the spectrum of views on controversial issues • Duty to represent the spectrum of views
  • 10. A little context: 1969 • Police raid Stonewall Inn in Greenwich Village – riots ensue • Bethel, NY hosts a now-infamous four-day concert • Steve Martin writes for the Smothers Brothers • Sesame Street airs for the first time • FCC bans cigarette ads • Warren Court (Loving v. Virginia, Griswold v.
  • 11. Red Lion Broadcasting v. FCC • A unanimous Court held the fairness doctrine was constitutional • Spectrum scarcity already restricted freedom of expression • Fairness doctrine regulations enhanced rather than infringed the freedoms of speech protected under the First Amendment. – Helped keep discussions of contested issues balanced and open – Prevented broadcasters from using a monopoly
  • 12. A little context: 1987 • People are terrified of AIDS • No one knows where the Post-Reagan U.S. will go • Iraqi missiles kill 37 soldiers in the Persian Gulf • The Iran-Contra Affair becomes a Scandal • Miami Herald Publishing Co. v. Tornillo (1974) has struck down a fairness doctrine for print • FCC v. League of Women Voters (1984) has
  • 13. FCC Stops Enforcing the Fairness Doctrine • Miami Herald Publishing Co. v. Tornillo, 1974 – Florida had a law similar to the Fairness Doctrine for print media – Court held that the law was unconstitutional content regulation • FCC v. League of Women Voters, 1984 – The Public Broadcasting Act of 1967 allocated federal funds to noncommercial tv and radio but prohibited editorializing on the stations – Court held that the law was unconstitutional content regulation
  • 14. A little context: Apples vs. Oranges • Miami Herald Publishing hinged on the notion that there was no pre-existing block to expression in print media • FCC v. League of Women Voters was about The Public Broadcasting Act of 1967 telling tv and radio stations they could not express any opinions on controversial matters if they received federal funds • Free Market Advocacy . . . – Free Market arguments trump any argument
  • 15. The Beautiful Myth of the Free Market • If people do not like something, they are smart enough to decide for themselves not to support it – If you don’t like the way they treat animals, don’t buy their meat – If you don’t like the politics they fund, don’t eat there – If you don’t like their employment policies, don’t shop there – If you don’t like the programming, change the channel
  • 16. The Ugly Truth about the Free Market • When the government does not regulate industries, those industries do not have to tell the truth. – If they won’t agree with the way we treat animals, prohibit cameras – If they won’t agree with the politics we fund, use a PAC – If they won’t agree with our employment policies, keep them private – If they won’t agree with our stance on a controversial issue, present it as uncontroverted fact with no opposition
  • 17. Free Market-4:Fairness Doctrine-0 • Mark S. Fowler, Free Market Advocate, FCC Chair – Broadcasters have no unique role in democracy – Owning a station doesn’t make a person a community trustee, it makes them a market participant (i.e., It’s all about the money, money, money) – Televisions are “just a toaster with pictures” – Have to assign frequencies • Corporate convenience has to be protected • Public good is the public’s responsibility • Dennis R. Patrick, Free Market Advocate,
  • 18. Rematch 1: Still No Victory • Syracuse Peace Council v. FCC, 1989, Federal Appeals Court – A broadcast station repeatedly ran spots for a proposed nuclear plant – The Peace Council requested the FCC enforce the Fairness Doctrine and require them to also include the arguments against the plant – FCC ruled the Fairness Doctrine was not in the public interest and violated the First Amendment so they would not apply it – Federal Appeals court noted the FCC reasoning
  • 19. Rematch 2: Still No Victory • Arkansas AFL-CIO v. FCC, 1993, Federal Appeals Court – AFL-CIO requested the FCC enforce the Fairness Doctrine and require KARK to broadcast both sides of a ballot issue – FCC ruled they didn’t have to enforce the Fairness Doctrine – Federal Appeals court agreed • The court only looked at the FCC decision to not apply it
  • 20. A little context: 2011 • Arab Spring Starts and Women Can Vote in Saudi Arabia (in 2015) • A Royal Wedding Joins Kate Middleton and Prince William • Rupert Murdoch – enough said • Seal Team 6 Wins • Gabrielle Giffords is Shot • DoJ stops enforcing DoMA • Occupy Wall Street Expands
  • 21. Executive Order 13563 on Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review • Rules are supposed to “protect public health, welfare, safety, and our environment while promoting economic growth, innovation, competitiveness, and job creation” • Communicate; stop making redundant and/or inconsistent rules • Be flexible and give people options • Science and technology are our friends • Look at old laws and fix them if they are “outmoded, ineffective, insufficient, or
  • 22. A little context: history repeating • The world/U.S. is still a crazy place, and probably always will be • Broadcasters act in personal interests, much like most people • Democracy still functions best when voters are informed • Free Market advocates still think people can inform themselves • Power and information are still resources that are
  • 23. Misinformation Abounds • In 1999, 1/5 Gallup poll respondents said earth was at the center of the universe • In 2009, 49 Bush supporters were given evidence that Bin Laden/Afghanistan (not Hussein/Iraq) were behind 9/11 48 of them left more certain of the Iraq/Hussein connection to the attack • In 2010, a majority of tea partiers agreed they got a bigger tax refund, but held firm that Obama raised their taxes
  • 24. So, life’s not fair…. … but maybe media can be • The future of the Fairness Doctrine as a regulation is bleak • The future of the practice of Fair broadcasting is up to you • “Fantasia can arise anew, from your dreams and wishes, Bastian.”