U.S. top court upholds TV profanity crackdown

WASHINGTON, (Reuters) – The Supreme Court upheld  yesterday a U.S. government crackdown on profanity on  television, a policy that subjects broadcasters to fines for  airing a single expletive blurted out on a live show.

In its first ruling on broadcast indecency standards in  more than 30 years, the high court handed a victory to the  Federal Communications Commission, which adopted the crackdown  against the one-time use of profanity on live television when  children are likely to be watching.

The case stemmed from an FCC ruling in 2006 that found News  Corp’s Fox television network violated decency rules when  singer Cher blurted out an expletive during the 2002 Billboard  Music Awards broadcast and actress Nicole Richie used two  expletives during the 2003 awards.

No fines were imposed, but Fox challenged the decision and  a U.S. appeals court in New York struck down the new policy as  “arbitrary and capricious” and sent the case back to the FCC  for a more reasoned explanation of its policy.

The FCC, under the administration of President George W.  Bush, had embarked on a crackdown of indecent content on  broadcast TV and radio after pop star Janet Jackson briefly  exposed her bare breast during the 2004 broadcast of the Super  Bowl halftime show.

Before 2004, the FCC did not ordinarily enforce  prohibitions against indecency unless there were repeated  occurrences.

By a 5-4 vote and splitting along conservative-liberal  lines, the justices overturned the ruling by the appeals court  and said the FCC’s new policy and its findings in the two cases  were neither arbitrary nor capricious.

“The agency’s reasons for expanding its enforcement  activity, moreover, were entirely rational,” Justice Antonin  Scalia said in summarizing the court’s majority ruling from the  bench.