Cigarettes and Satellites
John Banzhaf, who proudly describes himself as "the lawyer Reader's Digest called 'The Man Behind the Ban on Cigarette Commercials,'" is taking credit for a decision by XM Radio to stop carrying cigarette ads. Banzhaf, a law professor at George Washington University and well-known anti-smoking (and lately anti-fat) activist, filed the FCC complaint that ultimately led to the 1970 congressional ban on cigarette ads in "any medium of electronic communication subject to the jurisdiction of the Federal Communications Commission." In a letter to XM, Banzhaf warned that it may be violating that law. "Although satellite radio broadcasters apparently [consider] themselves outside the purview of the FCC, and regularly broadcast materials which would be offensive under the agency's standards," he says in a press release, "XM Radio's use of ground-based repeater/transmitters may subject it to FCC jurisdiction."
If the courts buy this argument, it will mean the end not only to cigarette commercials but to satellite radio's role as a 24-hour safe harbor from broadcast indecency rules. As Dan Kennedy suggested in the Boston Phoenix last month, "Howard Stern, who will jump from broadcast radio to the Sirius satellite network next year, may find his old nemesis, the FCC, waiting for him before he can even unveil his new show."
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
That's a boomer I look forward to outliving!
Fucking typical.
fucking depressing. oops this is an electronic medium. bleeping depressing.
But cigarettes kill our teenagers!
...several decades down the road..
...probably...
Now is probably (not) a good time for me to crow that I've not had a cigarette, not even a puff of someone else's cigarette, in three weeks. Yes, I'm proud. And I'm not really suffering much (I wasn't a particularly heavy smoker).
That being said - ARSHOLES!
When will you all realize that EVERYTHING is within the jurisdiction of the US Government?
I thought satellite radio didn't have commercials.
-Now is probably (not) a good time for me to crow that I've not had a cigarette, not even a puff of someone else's cigarette, in three weeks.-
So Stubby, not even a, well, stub?
Yer over the hard part now, it's a 21 day deal to break the habit. But you may find yourself someday smelling something that others detest and saying to yourself, 'hmmm, that smells good, blow some of that my way'.
"Your either a smoker, or your not."--Robin Williams
When will you all realize that EVERYTHING is within the jurisdiction of the US Government?
TPG,
I think Rep. Henry Waxman put it best with his "any matter, at any time" drivel directed toward MLB. It would be nice if they considered the whole country once in a while rather than the James Dobsons and Brent Bozells.
I don't smoke, but I'd be willing to take it up just so I could blow some in Banzhaf's goddamned face.
I think Rep. Henry Waxman put it best with his "any matter, at any time" drivel directed toward MLB. It would be nice if they considered the whole country once in a while rather than the James Dobsons and Brent Bozells.
Waxman only echoed the sentiments of those on both the left and the right that want the government to steamroll their opposition.
Nice blog.
http://www.virtualsearching.com/
"Although satellite radio broadcasters apparently [consider] themselves outside the purview of the FCC, and regularly broadcast materials which would be offensive under the agency's standards," he says in a press release, "XM Radio's use of ground-based repeater/transmitters may subject it to FCC jurisdiction."
Has anyone else ever noticed that Mr. Banzhaf and Representative Sensenbrenner are never in the same room at the same time?
It has to be said:
GODDAMN MOTHER FUCKER!