Public Communications Law Lecture 11 Slide 1 Obscenity and Indecency For the most part, the rules of both of these, and when these materials can be disseminated,

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
1 Marketing Violent Entertainment to Children The FTC’s Reports on Self-Regulation and Industry Practices in the Motion Picture, Music Recording & Electronic.
Advertisements

FCC – Part 4 Law and Policy. Telephone Conversations Station must notify the outside party of its intention to air the conversation before broadcast.
STANDARD(S): 12.1 Students explain the fundamental principles and moral values of American democracy. LEARNING OBJECTIVES/ GOALS/ SWBAT 1.Explain the importance.
Chapter 12 Prostitution, Pornography, & the Sex Trade
Slides prepared by Cyndi Chie and Sarah Frye A Gift of Fire Third edition Sara Baase Chapter 3: Freedom of Speech.
Obscenity Obscenity Defamation Defamation Hate Speech Hate Speech Boundaries of Free Speech.
First Amendment Rights. Freedom of Speech Freedom of Expression Absolutely Protected Speech Prior Restraint (PR) Void for Vagueness Least Drastic Means.
Freedom of Speech Chapter 37.
Obscenity – is anything that treats sex or nudity in an offensive or lewd manner, violates recognized standards of decency, and lacks serious literary,
Chapter 13.4 Freedom of the Press Government Mr. Biggs.
Freedom of Speech. Purpose for Freedom of Speech: To guarantee to each person a right of Free expression, in the Spoken and the Written word, and by all.
Public Communications Law Lecture 3 Slide 1 Prior Restraint vs. Subsequent Punishment Prior Restraint means preventing publication of speech before it.
Internet Legal Issues (Management 447) Professor Charles H. Smith Obscenity (Chapter 10) Spring 2006.
Group Community: A World Without Borders Kimberly Carter David Dobin Tim Hammond Chris Rushing.
A Gift of Fire, 2edChapter 5: Freedom of Speech in Cyberspace1 PowerPoint ® Slides to Accompany A Gift of Fire : Social, Legal, and Ethical Issues for.
S TEVENS AND L OW V ALUE M ETHODOLOGY 18 U.S.C. § 48(a): bars the knowing creation, sale, possession or depiction of animal cruelty “with the intention.
Chapter 7.6 Content Regulation. 2 History of Censorship Legal source of American speech protection is the 1791 First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution:
Freedom of Speech in Cyberspace 1. The U.S. Constitution - The 1 st Amendment: The 1 st Amendment Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment.
Obscenity and Indecency. Controlling / Regulating obscenity, pornography, indecency FCC regulations of broadcast Local, state, and federal governments’
Chapter 5 Freedom of Expression
Freedom of Speech and Freedom of Assembly. The Purpose of Freedom of Speech 1 to guarantee to each person a right of free expression, in the spoken and.
Brandon Hall CSC 540.  The US Government first attempted to filter the Internet in the early 90’s.  This was an attempt to protect minors against the.
Press, Public & Politics Ownership, Regulation, and Guidance of Media.
N EW T OPIC : CONTENT - BASED RESTRICTIONS OF HIGH VALUE SPEECH Have been discussing low value categories of speech – all of which involve laws that impose.
Bootcamp 2009 Porn, Predators, and the Pressure to Police Jennifer Stisa Granick, Civil Liberties Director.
Civil Liberties and Public Policy. The Bill of Rights– Then and Now Civil Liberties – Definition: The legal constitutional protections against the government.
Ch3 Freedom of Speech The US Constitution.
IS 490 Notes for Baase Textbook, Chapter 3. Check the Homework Page for the weekly assignment (it's due next Monday). Go to the Angel Page for this course,
The Bill of Rights The First 10 Amendments. Amendment 1 Protects 5 freedoms Religion Assembly Press Petition Speech.
Chapter 19: Civil Liberties: First Amendment Freedoms Section 3
Licensing A prospective licensee must meet these qualifications: The applicant must be a citizen of the United States or have less than 25% foreign ownership.
Chapter 18 Obscenity & Pornography. Pornography Protected by First Amendment Unless child pornography-not protected PgP BUSA331 Chapter 182.
Government Influence on Media. Who has more clout?
Freedom of Speech. 1 st Amendment The essential, core purpose of the 1 st Amendment is self-governance. It enables people to obtain information from.
American Government Chapter 19 Section 3. Freedom of Speech 1 st and 14 th Amendments Guarantees spoken and written word liberty Ensures open discussion.
New York Times v. Sullivan (1963) By: Carmen Vaca.
Freedom of Speech  Seems like a dumb question, but why is it so important to a democratic government?  Ability to debate actions and policies of elected.
1 Freedom of Speech In Cyberspace Changing Communications Paradigms Changing Communications Paradigms Offensive Speech and Censorship in Cyberspace AnonymitySpam.
OBSCENE AND PORNOGRAPHY: SUPREME COURT CASES AND PUBLIC OPINION Online Pornography.
Freedom of Speech and the Press Whatever happened to freedom of speech?
CptS 401 Adam Carter. Quiz Question 7 Obscene speech is protected by the First Amendment. A. True B. False 2.
October 21, 2008 Jennifer Q.; Loriane M., Michelle E., Charles H. Internet Safety.
Public Communications Law Lecture 13 Slide 1 Controlling Pre-Trial Publicity A court is obligated to try to make sure the defendant gets a fair trial.
Around the 1960’s, the Motion Picture Association Of America created a form of guideline, in order to protect what one saw on television and in the.
Slides prepared by Cyndi Chie and Sarah Frye A Gift of Fire Third edition Sara Baase Chapter 3: Freedom of Speech.
Freedom of Speech Computers in the World.
Obscenity Indecency Profanity WTF? Regulation of Offensive Content.
Constitutional Review The truth your founding fathers never told you!
Freedom of Expression Free Speech Free Press Assembly and Petition.
Obscenity By: Kong Her, Jon Colvin, Alex Lee, Humsab Moua & Vladimir Chernyy.
Obscenity By: Kong Her, Jon Colvin, Alex Lee, Humsab Moua & Vladimir Chernyy Made on October 16, 2015.
What is Obscenity?. What is your Definition? Are These Obscene?
1. Vagueness and Overbreadth: Laws governing free speech must be clear and specific. > Laws that unnecessarily prohibit too much expression are considered.
Freedom of Assembly and Press. Freedom of Assembly Right to assemble (gather and protest) can be regulated based ―time, place, and manner of protest Nazi.
Chapter 19: Civil Liberties: First Amendment Freedoms Section 3.
Media Regulation GOVT 2305, Module 7.
The Law of Journalism & Mass Communication
What is Obscenity?.
What is Obscenity?.
Media Regulation October 19, 2017.
Boundaries of Free Expression III (Obscenity II and Violence/Cruelty)
This section focuses on prior restraint and other free press issues.
Limits to the Freedom of Speech
A Gift of Fire Third edition Sara Baase
Constitutional Issues
Theories Behind Freedom of Expression
Freedom of Speech in Cyberspace
A Gift of Fire Third edition Sara Baase
A Gift of Fire Third edition Sara Baase
Presentation transcript:

Public Communications Law Lecture 11 Slide 1 Obscenity and Indecency For the most part, the rules of both of these, and when these materials can be disseminated, deal with the dissemination of sexually explicit materials. Such sexually suggestive or explicit materials can be generally split into three categories: –Obscenity: This category is so offensive that is deserves and receives no First Amendment protection. It can be regulated or outlawed at the will of the states. –Indecency: This category is “less offensive” than obscenity. It enjoys First Amendment protection. However, it may be regulated more than political speech. e.g., to protect children from indecent images, etc. –Speech that doesn’t rise to the indecency level enjoys full First Amendment protection.

Public Communications Law Lecture 11 Slide 2 Obscenity Basic rules: –Obscenity is not protected by the Constitution. –Distribution of obscene materials may be outlawed and punished. –Distribution of obscene materials by media outlets is banned. What is obscene? (or, “I can’t define it, but I know it when I see it” – Justice P. Stewart) To be considered obscene requires three elements: –The material appeals to prurient interest; –The material is “patently offensive” in the community; and –The material lacks redeeming social value.

Public Communications Law Lecture 11 Slide 3 Prurient Interest The material must appeal to “lascivious, shameful or morbid” interest in sex. –The standard by which this is measured is that of the “average person.” This does NOT mean that the average person has to find it sexually appealing. Pornography can also be aimed at a percentage of the market. For “atypical” sexual depictions, the standard is based on the people to whom the images are targeted. –This is measured based on a “community” standard. What an average person in Las Vegas considers obscene is not necessarily the same as what the average person in Salt Lake City does. –Because of this rule, wide distributors of these materials may be subjected to the rules of the most stringent jurisdiction.

Public Communications Law Lecture 11 Slide 4 Protection of Children Where children are likely to see the disseminated materials, the standard is set much lower for a finding of obscenity. Child pornography is inherently considered obscene, even if it doesn’t meet the other parts of the definition. The standard for defining what prurient interest means, with regard to depictions of children, is much lower than for equivalent depictions of adults. –Disseminators of pornographic materials are required to keep records that prove their subjects are adults. However, some federal regulations regarding child pornography have been reversed as overbroad or too vague.

Public Communications Law Lecture 11 Slide 5 Patently Offensive Sexually stimulating materials are not inherently obscene. It must go beyond that to the point of offensiveness. –Again, this is measured based on the community standard. –This generally requires something more than mere nudity. –Deviant or strange conduct can help something be considered offensive. –Curse words, in and of themselves, are not considered patently offensive, though they may, of course, be regulated in broadcast media.

Public Communications Law Lecture 11 Slide 6 Lack of Redeeming Social Value Redeeming social value could be that the work has usefulness from the standpoint of: –Science –Medicine –Art The work must be looked at as a whole when determining whether it has value. –e.g., one can’t look at a few isolated pages of a full length novel and say the whole novel is obscene.

Public Communications Law Lecture 11 Slide 7 Privacy Issues and Prior Restraint Possession of obscenity can be, and is often, criminalized. –This can also include sending or ordering it through the mail. Entrapment of people to order obscene materials can lead to a successful defense of entrapment. Possessing obscene material on one’s own home has been held to be protected by privacy laws. –However, this can be eviscerated by laws that make it illegal to acquire, transport, distribute etc. the materials. –Whatever right to privacy exists does not extend to theaters, even if privately owned and open only to adults. Like all First Amendment issues, prior restraint is very hard to come by. –The government agencies can pre-screen certain media disseminations of questionable materials, but this process is laden with protections.

Public Communications Law Lecture 11 Slide 8 Indecency This includes sexually explicit material that, for whatever reason, does not meet the definition of obscenity. The courts have rules that the FCC can regulate indecency in broadcast television, and the FCC does so, often punishing broadcasters for airing indecent material. The regulation includes: –Limiting sexual material to certain times of the day. –Not allowing curse words on the air. –2001 FCC guidelines provide that a broadcast is indecent if it: Describes sexual or excretory organs or activities; and It is patently offensive to the average viewer or listener. –This is a case by case determination. –The FCC has gotten more strict with isolated references recently and has increased the fines and punishments levied.

Public Communications Law Lecture 11 Slide 9 Indecency Through Different Media Broadcast TV –The FCC has total control and indecency is often limited by time or prohibited all together (see above). Telephone –Indecent content that does not rise to the level of obscenity (e.g., “dial-a-porn” phone numbers cannot be banned, but can be regulated. –The law can (and does) ban phone content that is “obscene.” Cable TV –Cable TV essentially enjoys the same freedom newspapers do. –Obscenity can be banned but adult access to indecency cannot. –Some rules to protect children are okay but not if too broad.

Public Communications Law Lecture 11 Slide 10 The Internet The Supreme Court struck down a federal law that tried to prevent indecent materials from being disseminated over the net. The Court ruled websites enjoy the same protections as the print media (and cable TV). –The Court rejected the comparison of the net to over-the-air TV. A later federal law prohibiting material “harmful to minors” also was struck down as being vague and overbroad. Public libraries (that accept public funding) can be required to filter out indecent material if they allow internet access to children. –Adults may ask the librarian to disable the filter for them. “The Constitution does not guarantee the right to acquire information at a public library without any risk of embarrassment”

Public Communications Law Lecture 11 Slide 11 Violence in the Media Violent songs and video cannot qualify as obscene without sexual content. Although, like indecency, it can be regulated in its distribution through the media. Violent pornography can be banned if it meets the definition of obscenity. –However, efforts to ban violent pornography all together have failed as they are overbroad or too vague when trying to enact a blanket ban. –A law to ban violent sexual abuse against women also failed for similar First Amendment reasons.

Public Communications Law Lecture 11 Slide 12 The V-chip Although violence and pornography cannot be banned and can only be regulated to a point, federal law requires TV shows to be rated so as to allow parents to keep offensive content off their TV by use of the V-chip. Both Cable and broadcast TV participate in the ratings system and parents can program their TVs to block shows that meet certain ratings. Ratings for children’s shows: –TV-Y: appropriate for young children –TV-Y7: directed to children 7 years old and over –TV-Y7-FV: may not be appropriate for children under 7

Public Communications Law Lecture 11 Slide 13 V-Chip (cont.) Ratings for general shows: –TV-G: general audiences –TV-PG: parental guidance suggested –TV-14: material may be unsuitable for children under 14 –TV-MA: mature; material may be unsuitable for children under 17 In addition, shows rated PG or higher may have one letter codes, explaining why it is rated, including: –V (violence) –S (sexual scenes of innuendo) –L (language) –D (suggestive dialogue)

Public Communications Law Lecture 11 Slide 14 Zoning Laws in Controlling Sexual Expression Although indecency peddling stores and shops cannot be banned unless obscene, they can be restricted to geographical areas. –The regulation has to meet the general rules for “content neutral” and “time, place and manner” restrictions. –Therefore, the law must leave room open for the expression, as long as the expression is not obscene. Some content neutral laws, like bans on public nudity, may be allowed, even if they don’t provide alternative allowances. –Once again, however, the law may not be too broad.

Public Communications Law Lecture 11 Slide 15 Other Ways of Controlling Sexual Expression Postal laws allowing homeowners to restrict their receipt of indecent material are allowed. Laws that restrict display of indecent materials to where minors can’t see them are allowed. The government may not informally pressure people to stop peddling such material if it could not be banned. The Supreme Court allowed the cutting of funding to “art” that is sexually explicit. –Though, lower federal courts have, in some cases, restricted the cutting off of funding based on content.

Public Communications Law Lecture 11 Slide 16 Private Regulation of Sexual Content Some industries police themselves in terms of voluntary rating systems: –The MPAA rates movies as G,PG, PG-13 R or NC-17 –Music (RIAA) –Video games (ESRB) –Various ISPs and These are a privately run systems. The law does not enforce them. The federal government has been reluctant to step into this area because the industries can do a better job of policing themselves. Citizens’ groups often pressure media outlets about objectionable content as well.