Katrina vanden Heuvel Praises Media Megalomaniac Michael Copps
Behold the latest Washington Post column from Nation publisher Katrina vanden Heuvel, in which the lady praises Federal Communications Commissioner and media megalomaniac Michael Copps:
[I]n his two terms on the FCC, Copps has become the 21st-century embodiment of that old-fashioned creature: a public servant of deep integrity and courage who uses his position to speak for those whose voices are rarely heard. He has done so at a time when press freedoms have been challenged as never before, not just by technology but by corporate interests that seek to dominate the flow of information — and the profits derived from it.
In the wake of Janet Jackson's Super Bowl nipple slip, and at Copps' behest, Congress increased indecency fines from $27,500 per incident to $500,000 per incident. As I wrote last year, Copps then
threatened to go after daytime soap operas, as well as network dramas like "ER" and "The Bedford Diaries." The ripple spread even to public media, for which the commissioner has an unabashed fetish. PBS pulled certain episodes of the British detective series "Prime Suspect," and a PBS programmer in Boston felt compelled to ask his superiors if he should cut an episode of "Antiques Roadshow" that featured a nude photograph of Marilyn Monroe. According to a report from the First Amendment Center, Copps' stomping around got so bad that "television producers complained about network intimidation."
Hailed by groups like the Parents Television Council and Concerned Women for America, Copps appeared to be unstoppable until 2006, when Fox, NBC, and other networks filed suit against the FCC for going overboard on indecency. In 2009, the Supreme Court ruled that the commission "had enacted its policy correctly," but sent the case back to the Second Circuit to determine which of the FCC's guidelines were constitutional. The Second Circuit decided in July of this year that they were not.
In response, Copps promptly labeled the ruling as "anti-family" and encouraged his colleagues "to clarify and strengthen [the FCC's] indecency framework."
The occassion for vanden Heuvel's latest column is the release of a FCC study that suggests the media industry is fully capable of saving itself (via creative destruction, natch). Copps isn't pleased with the report, and issued a dissent earlier this month that read:
Localism means less program homogenization, more local and less canned music, and community news actually originated in the market where it is broadcast rather than being imported so much of the time from far-away studios controlled by absentee owners. In this continuing era of media industry consolidation, we all know that coverage of local music, local talent, local culture, local sports, local diversity communities, local political issues and election campaigns (other than horse-race odds-making) are more the exception than the rule. The Staff Report does recognize problems in the generation of local news and information and the lack of accountability journalism, to its credit. This underscores the point I have been making for years. But instead of calling for stepped-up Commission action, it tinkers around the edges, for example urging philanthropies to find better ways to do their business, asking Congress to change the tax code, and suggesting that government direct more of its advertising to local media. Then, rather stunningly I thought, the Staff Report recommends shutting down our pending localism proceeding.
Rather stunnginly, Copps believes that the FCC should approve what events local TV can cover and what music local radio stations can play. That's really wild, what with "Congress shall make no law," and all. Ironically, if Copps succeeded in forcing regional papers to cover only regional topics, the Washington Post would have to stop running vanden Heuvel's thoughtless columns. She lives in New York, after all.
More Reason on Michael Copps, The Nation, and the FCC.
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*vomits copiously*
Not too locally, I hope.
The urge to control what other people can do, think, or listen to knows no political kinship.
Everybody mind your own business and keep your hands to yourself.
"[I]n his two terms on the FCC, Copps has become the 21st-century embodiment of that old-fashioned creature: a public servant of deep integrity and courage who uses his position to speak for those whose voices are rarely heard."
Katrina, you ignorant slut. That's a bug not a feature.
This song and dance about "speaking for the downtrodden" is getting really old. Just who the fuck are these people anyway? Just whose voice *is* getting heard? Whoever's it is, it sure as hell isn't mine! One of these days, it'd be nice for these idiots to hear the voices of those whose voices *really* never get heard in Washington. Namely, the voices of the majority of people who actually live in this fucking country....
The leftist "downtrodden man" narrative is as old as The Jungle. Man, is it fucking stale.
Heck, it's as old as the Beatitudes.
Just whose voice *is* getting heard? Whoever's it is, it sure as hell isn't mine!
What makes you think anyone wants to hear it?
See, speaking for "the voiceless" gives your voice more moral weight than if you were speaking for yourself alone. It's the socialist equivalent of being a preacher.
Buh, buh, the evil corporations and plutocrats want to control our thoughts and brainwash our children! They must be stopped, First Amendment be damned!
"Localism means less program homogenization, more local and less canned music, and community news actually originated in the market where it is broadcast rather than being imported so much of the time from far-away studios controlled by absentee owners"
This guy needs an editor.
That is a seriously ugly sentence. Criteria for "great public citizen" apparently doesn't include "writes good and does other stuff good too."
And the guy needs a history lesson too.
In the 1960s, "prime time" for network television began at 7:30. Then the FCC cut it back to 8:00 to allow for "local content." What did the local broadcasters give us? Nationally-syndicated shows like "Jeopardy" and "Wheel of Fortune," or re-runs of networks shows. Hooray for local content!
""Localism means less program homogenization, more local and less canned music"
Is he for real? I grew up at the Jersey Shore, where we have a number of local stations. They played the same top-40 crap as the national network affiliates. They didn't even play Springsteen until he hit the Top 40.
Let's face it..localism is an attack against Clear Channel, Fox and syndicated conservative talk radio. Period. Any other justification is bullshit.
Of course, the next step after promoting localism by preventing mergers and consolidation will be subsidies since no one will really want to watch "local content".
Naturally the issuing of licences to the cronies of the connected will continue to be SOP.
What a dumb sycophantic bitch this Katrina van Latrine is. I mean, wow.
vandoucheNozzle.
ftfy.
who uses his position to speak for those whose voices are rarely heard.
From what I've seen, Copps mainly seems to speak for fundy whackjobs and massive corporations who support creating barriers to entry.
I'm surprised to hear Katrina supporting the imposition of conservative bitter-clinger values on national media outlets. I'm beyond being surprised when a hardcore lefty comes out in favor of corporate favoritism by the government.
I'm surprised to hear Katrina supporting the imposition of conservative bitter-clinger values on national media outlets.
Yeah, I mean aside from the irony that Riggs points out -"if Copps succeeded in forcing regional papers to cover only regional topics, the Washington Post would have to stop running vanden Heuvel's thoughtless columns" (don't give up the dream!)- it seems bizarre that a fundamental lefty like Katrina would support a 1st amendment defying FCC commissioner. I thought the left was all about burning flags n shit for free speech? Since when did they get in bed with the Parents Television Council and Concerned Women for America?
Puzzling.
Not really. Multinational corporate free speech=bad. NGO/interest group free speech=good (unless it's a convservative group).
This rule applies generally, and trumps any secondary factors like "principles".
They believe they can use the FCC to attack forms of media dominated by the right (talk radio in particular, but also Fox News if they can get away with it), as well as to economically cripple corporations that they perceive as being friendly to Republicans.
"Liberals ... pretend ? and often quite honestly believe ? that they are hot for liberty. They never really are. ... The liberty to have and hold property is not one they recognize. They believe only in the liberty to envy, hate and loot the man who has it."
-- H.L. Mencken
Hey, Katrina vanden Heuvel, SUCK ME DRY, BITCH!
It surprises me that casual misogynism is so common within the libertarian community. (drink?)
vanden Heuvel is ignorant, stupid, statist, sycophantic, egotistical, et cetera ad nauseum. But this isn't enough? She must also be sexually demeaned?
You're right, she is more of a cunt than a bitch.
She must also be sexually demeaned?
If she twittered her Weiner to college students, we could joke about that.
Work with the material you've been given.
"Must"? We're libertarians fool. We aren't obligated to sexually demean her, but we also aren't obligated to refrain from doing so. Choice, sucka!
I mean, what did he expect in a thread about free speech? As far as I'm concerned a member of the media asking for censorship deserves any insult thrown at them.
Damn straight (it was also a shot at censureship).
Has the Nation always sucked statist cock, or did that just start happening when Katrina took over?
It started out as an abolitionist paper and was edited by a classical liberal with an anti-socialist bent. It lost its way over the years.
In the eighties it was kind of an interesting read despite being a creature of the left.
The publisher was Hamilton Fish IV, a descendant of old right isolationist Republicans who'd turned nominally Democrat. He still had a crochetty independent streak and was no particular party's toady.
The dominant writers at that time were Alexander Cockburn and Hitch. Predictably leftist for the most part but they could turn and savage either party for the hell of it. Naturally, lots of Regan-bashing but it always challenged your thinking.
When I last saw it in 200o it was a mindless creature of the Democratic Party establishment. The last article I read there was complaining about how the mean ol' Republicans hadn't let Al Gore steal Florida.
They used to have a "European correspondent" whose every column was a paean to Tito Yugoslavia's "worker self-management," whereby the old hatreds (sectarian, ethnic, you name it) had been defused and placed on the road to extinction.
Uh-huh.
Now that's funny
surprise, surprise
power worshipping lewinsky puts on kneepads and worships power
Yes indeed, that nipple ripple created quite a flood. I would like to have sex with that Katrina. She's a haughty naughty hottie.
interesting that libtoids who favor local control criticize a comissioner who also favors local control. maybe u just wanna stuff katrina's mouth
my internets stocker is back if your gonna spooff me at leest be clevre abuot it ok old mex?
Are you saying Copps wants local FCCs across the country? That seems to be the only way your comparison makes sense.
At least we can stuff it. You? Toothpick.
weiner aint got nothing on me since he didnt confirm or deny benji's question about a full 7 inches
As sergeant Nick Penis would say, "poor kid, still measuring in inches".
"local control"
I don't think those words mean what you and Katrina think they mean.
It's so cute that this Michael Copps fellow thinks he's somehow relevant. While he's going around throwing hissy fits, I'm actually filling peoples' needs outside his boundary of artificial scarcity.
Perfect comment considering I'm listening to hawaiian music via pandora right now; I like local stuff, just in a location somewhere between me and Hong Kong instead of my actual local area (which would offer me hipster trash and a lot of shitty commercial rap wannabes).
Why are lyrics censored OVER THA FUCKIN INTERNET?!?
Omar comin'.
How my hair look Mike?
Ironically, if Copps succeeded in forcing regional papers to cover only regional topics, the Washington Post would have to stop running vanden Heuvel's thoughtless columns.
I guess every cloud does have a silver lining.
Copps is so stupid he should be removed from office and committed to a facility where he can't hurt himself.
Seriously. Anyone who thinks that in the age of the internet you can produce viewership for "local" programming by decreeing that radio stations and TV stations carry it needs to start wearing a helmet full-time.
They play local programming on the radio stations in my area now. I don't listen to it. If Copps tries to fix it so that it's on every station at once, I'll listen to MP3's instead.
Local music? I've heard some of our local bands.
I'd rather torture my ear with Nickelback.
I'd rather torture my ear with Nickelback.
Zod, no! what happened? Wife left you? Pet died? Lost your job?
Whatever it is, nothing is so bad you have to subject yourself to Nickelback. Let us help you.
Local content. Pff. I consume media to get away from the local content I get when I leave the house.
No kidding. I stopped listening to FM radio in 2007 and only listen to WBAL on AM now. The only time I see anything on local tee-vee is when it's Tivo'd, which usually is House or a non-NASCAR race that has the misfortune of ending up on Fox or ABC.
The drek that passes for broadcast media today can go repeatedly fuck itself into extinction.
I once attended a lunch where L.A. Times columnist Jim Rainey begged Copps to use a cross-ownership challenge to force Sam Zell out, and then Copps went on for 10 minutes about how much better informed Americans were when they could watch Huntley/Brinkley over dinner (I am not making that up) and be secure in knowing the newscast was drawing on reporting from bureaus in at least three continents.
So K-Van is precisely right. It's not your father's FCC. It's your grandfather's.
TL;DR. Fuck you Michael Copps, and fuck the FCC with a blistering hot iron poker.
I'll read the article later but I'm confident I won't have to walk back my opening statement.
As promised, I read it. My prior comment was rather generous it would seem.
See? That's 3 minutes you'll never get back. NEVER.
Barf.
Why does the Internet hate minorities?
This is what happens when you have a snooze alarm on a stasis field.
The FCC should focus on bandwidth regulation and get out of the content regulation business altogether.
Fascinating, isn't it, that "local control" can only be accomplished with national control.
I cast a wary eye upon any progressive that's so feverishly passionate about all things "local". It reminds me of how the most oppressive totalitarian regimes insist on using terms like "peoples," "democratic" and "republic" in naming the sad patches of dirt they preside over.
You fuckers just wait... the REAL power has yet to be unleashed.
This underscores the point I have been making for years.
That you used to wear an onion on your belt as that was the style of the time?
He is from Morganville, give the guy a break...
Give me five bees for a quarter!
Copps believes that the FCC should approve what events local TV can cover and what music local radio stations can play. That's really wild, what with "Congress shall make no law," and all.
Lulz! You libertarians and your silly constitution fetish! It's just some scratch paper a bunch of dead white guys farted on 230 years ago. Who knows what the fuck they were talking about when they wrote it?
thanks