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Michael Powell to Leave FCC

Anonymous Slashdotter writes "Michael Powell, chairman of the FCC, will be stepping down from his post soon. 'Powell, who maintained a light regulatory hand as the nation's chief media watchdog but collected some of the largest indecency fines against U.S. broadcasters, planned to issue a statement Friday but was not expected to hold a formal news conference, these officials said, speaking on condition of anonymity.'"

11 of 409 comments (clear)

  1. nice to see a failure to mention... by minus_273 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    his focus on promoting HDTV and digital communcations, deregualtion of the internet,etc. I suppose there is no point in giving him any credit in any of that since he is a republican. Since this is a tech site, check the Cnet article. I think that is more news for nerds.

    --
    The war with islam is a war on the beast
    The war on terror is a war for peace
    1. Re:nice to see a failure to mention... by Jeffrey+Baker · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Reader beware: in the above post "deregulation of the Internet" means Powell allowed the cable companies to censor their Internet service, in opposition to decades of common-carrier policy. In GOP speak, "deregulation" means rich white guys get all the money, and the customer gets a nice dick in the ass.

  2. You're so off base by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    There is no "criminal" here. Showing a middle aged saggy boob isn't criminal. Somebody saying "fuck" isn't criminal.

    [as an aside, I'll tell you what's criminal... spending billions of dollars a week in Iraq for no reason, and then running a budget deficit that is destroying our economy. . That's criminal, but that requires thought to actually figure out]

    Michael Powell was and is wrong because he tried to use his own personal standards when it came to fines. He was and is a believer in the market...except when it came to "decency".

    Meanwhile, he pioneered some of the biggest corporate givaways of spectrum... Ask Nextel who got billions of dollars in free space.

    Good riddence to possibly the worst thing to happen to free speech in quite a while. Michael Powell proved himself over and over again to be incompetent. He proved over and over again that he got his job because of his daddy.

    If there is a god and karma, he'll get sick before he gets to spend a penny of the money he hopes to get in private industry. He's exactly what's wrong with government these days.

  3. Re:Stern.. by bendawg · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Stern went on a 10 minute rant about it this morning.
    Basically he said that Powell didn't deserve to be there, and was only there because of his dad (which he's said many times before). He also said that it probably wouldn't make any difference, because the Bush administration is still in power, and they will probably find someone who is just as bad or worse than Powell was about trying to enforce "indecency standards". That was followed up by calling Powell basically a two-faced liar who said that indecency should be controlled by the market, then "cowtowing" to pressure from the large conglomerate radio organizations, and allowing a few organizations to become very powerful in radio.

  4. Fark had it right by Chairboy · · Score: 1, Interesting
    As fark.com put it, he's obviously stepping down because his work is done, as evidenced by Fox pixelating an animated butt on Family Guy (http://www.canada.com/entertainment/story.html?id =125fef6e-bfc5-4ffc-92fd-736badb8b689) out of fear of getting fined.

    If you run the FCC and you get a cartoon to censor itself spontaneously, on FOX of all places, that's how you know you've dealt some serious spankage.

  5. What Howard Stern had to say by DoorFrame · · Score: 1, Interesting

    "Howard came back from break and got Mike Walker on the line so they could play the Gossip Game with him. Howard told Mike that something just came over the wire saying that Michael Powell is probably going to resign today. Howard said that's not a surprise because now that he's leaving radio, he's got nothing else to do. Gary told Howard that they're getting a ton of requests from the press for Howard to give some quotes. Howard said that this is a great thing because the guy didn't deserve the job in the first place. He believes that Powell got the job because of who his father was. Howard gave the history of Colin Powell and how Michael Powell was given the job to pay back Colin Powell. Howard said that Powell didn't deserve the position and eventually started fining Howard and other broadcasters to look good to the religious right. Howard went off on Powell for a couple of minutes and complained about the things he did while he was in that position. He claims that Powell and the FCC blackmailed companies by threatening to hold up their licenses. Howard said ''Thank God he's gone... but God help us with what's next.''"

    From Mark's Friggin Website

  6. Re:What does Howard Stern Say? by oldave · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Hence the new reliance on delay systems. It gives the broadcaster a chance to review what's going to air before it does, and if something inappropriate comes along, they can (and should) hit the dump button.

    I'm not suggesting that people are too prudish, and I'm not arguing that "anything goes" should be the policy, either.

    I agree with the idea that if a show is advertised as for all ages, that's what it should be. But I also understand that things sometimes happen in live events that the broadcaster cannot predict.

    If I were king, the solution would have been to propose fining CBS affiliates - all of them - unless they proved that they had installed delay systems and trained operators to use them, within 30 days of the order. So as to help prevent a similar situation in the future.

    In other words, people make mistakes, and offering a chance to fix the problem is better policy than simply punishing for the sake of punishment.

  7. Re:Vonage might not exist today w/o Powell. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Except that the parent pointed out that that is not true and backed it up with a list of facts. Lets see YOUR list of "don't likes" and compare it with his list of "likes"?

    Don't bother coming on here and saying "it aint so" and then providing NOTHING to back it up, we have enough luzers here already.

  8. Re: his vision by mcc · · Score: 2, Interesting

    On the one hand, people complain about the FCC slapping fines on large corporations for broadcasting media that they deem "inappropriate". Then in the very same breath, they complain about the FCC supporting large corporations. If the FCC was truly all about supporting large networks, they would allow them to appeal to the ever-increasing moral decadence of our society completely unharrassed.

    Well, this is only the case if you view the Christian Coalitian as something other than a large corporation, right?

    ^_^

    Anyway, what you seem to be gesturing at is that the FCC is currently in favor of "moral decency" standards on television, and also currently in favor of corporate-owned consolidation in the media market. Whereas the consensus viewpoint on Slashdot seems currently to be that we should have diversity of ownership and diversity of content (i.e., low regulation of 'obscenity') in the media market.

    If you oversimplify the viewpoint commonly seen on slashdot to "OMFG CORPORATIONS ARE THE EVIL", then perhaps it doesn't really make sense. The trick here is that "OMFG CORPORATIONS ARE THE EVIL" is not the viewpoint actually being particularly expressed by anyone; it's just a straw man. Back in reality, meanwhile, it's reasonable to be opposed to policies that turn the FCC into a moneymaking scheme for an increasingly small number of corporate players at the detriment of both the citizen and the citizen's good derived from the public airwaves; and it is reasonable to be opposed to policies which allow a small vocal minority of self-appointed morality police to determine how the citizenry as a whole makes use of the public airwaves; and these two things are not in any way incompatible.

  9. Affirmative Action by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    I have always wondered if Affirmative Action should be a one time thing. IE: If you are considered some kind of a special category and you always get special treatment, then you block others in your special group from getting special treatment. If your dad is head of the military, and then Secretary of State, and you are a millionaire because you are a currupt pol, do your children still get to go to the head of the line based upon the falacy that somehow melitonin content is a relevant metric as to station in life?

    Obviously I am inviting a flame war here. Why, because I feel that we have a situation where Affirmative Action has failed us. Instead of getting well-deserving kids from poverty getting special treatment, we have rich Rebubbican a-holes getting all the special treatment.

    If you get considered for special treatment more than once, then you take away from the rest.

    I think I will post this one Anon

  10. Re:Stern.. by jav1231 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    And how has he done that? NO really....how?
    BTW: I do agree that warning labels are not censorship. What is wrong with saying what the content is? Liberals hate this because they can't stand for truth to be known about anything they do. No one is saying "Don't listen to this!" or "You can't listen to this." The warning labels are there to say, "This product contains this content." In light of all of the hooplah over the MPAA and folks saying "I don't want to buy the whole CD, I want one song so I download." Well, think about buying your son or daughter a CD only to find out it contains lyrics about raping people and screwing animals. Don't they have some right to know about the product before buying it?