Fairness & Accuracy in Reporting (FAIR)

ACTION ALERT:
NAB 2000: Speak Out for Media Democracy

August 30, 2000

Commercial broadcasting has gone through stunning changes in
recent years, as deregulation and consolidation have shifted
the balance of power to a small handful of companies with
interests and investments spread across the media landscape.
Ironically, the changes have been most profound in radio, a
medium ideally suited to local ownership and diverse
content.

That historic shift has inspired citizens to gather in San
Francisco in September for the annual radio convention of
the National Association of Broadcasters (NAB), the
principal lobbying and membership organization of the
commercial broadcasting industry. Activists will take to the
streets to voice their opposition to corporate management of
the public's airwaves, and to reopen the debate over who
exactly should get access to this vital public resource.


How Did NAB Nab the Airwaves?

Since the Telecommunications Act of 1996 -- which was
essentially bought and paid for by the NAB and other
corporate media lobbies -- there has been a parade of media
mergers. The most dramatic consolidation has occurred in the
radio industry, creating a handful of huge radio empires
like Viacom/Infinity and Clear Channel.

The damage to radio diversity is staggering: Over 4,000
radio stations have been bought up since the Telecom Act,
and minority ownership of media declined about 9 percent in
the two years following the Telecom Act, the largest drop
since the federal government began tracking such data (USA
Today, 7/7/98).

The changes wrought by Telecom '96 should come as no
surprise: The NAB is one of the top lobbying groups on
Capitol Hill, and was intimately involved in crafting some
of the legislation themselves.

But the NAB still isn't satisfied, with broadcasters looking
to deregulate the market even further. They're now pushing
the FCC for an end to cross-ownership rules, which are all
that prevent newspapers from being absorbed by the broadcast
industry. They have already successfully lobbied to
eliminate rules that prohibited a network from owning two
stations in the same city.


What's at Stake?

--Low Power Radio

Against this backdrop of an increasingly consolidated media,
low power radio activists have been working for years to
free the airwaves from the large broadcast companies.
Through years of civil disobedience, activists eventually
won a partial victory in January 2000, when the Federal
Communications Commission (FCC) announced its plans to begin
licensing low power stations in much of the country.

Quick to counterattack, the NAB led a lobbying effort to get
the FCC to reverse course. What was originally a plan to
bring literally hundreds of new, non-commercial voices to
the airwaves now faces an uphill battle on Capitol Hill.

--Campaign Finance Reform

Just like low power radio, campaign finance reform is an
issue that has garnered support across the political
spectrum. Because much of the money raised for political
campaigns is given to corporate media to buy campaign
advertising, the NAB has consistently opposed common sense
campaign finance reform measures like free airtime for
candidates.

The gravy train for broadcasters keeps getting richer: One
study found that House incumbents were spending 60 percent
more on television and radio advertising in 1994 than they
had just four years prior. Broadcasters work the other side
of the political money game as well, donating millions of
dollars in "soft money" to the major political parties.

--"Public Interest" PR

While long-standing FCC provisions mandate that broadcasters
serve the public "interest, convenience or necessity," few
licenses have been revoked for failure to provide public
service. For their part, the broadcast industry wants you to
know that they indeed perform a valuable service to the
community.

To prove their point, the NAB commissions an annual study
that assigns a dollar figure to their public service. In
1998, the NAB's "Bringing Community Service Home" figured
that commercial broadcasters provided public services to the
tune of $7 billion a year. Over half of that total, however,
is based on the dubious assumption that all the airtime
given to PSAs could have been sold to paying advertisers;
many PSAs air in hard-to-sell timeslots, like the middle of
the night.

A more concrete measurement of community service, by the
Benton Foundation and Media Access Project, evaluated the
programming offered by commercial media. They found that
local public affairs shows made up less than one half of one
percent of the fare offered by commercial broadcasters.
Thirty-five percent of the stations had no local news, and
25 percent had no local public affairs programming
whatsoever.


Fight Back!

>From the perspective of corporate media, the future looks
brighter than ever. Time Warner CEO Gerald Levin (1/2/00,
CNN) foresees a world where the media business is "more
important than government... more important than educational
institutions and non-profits." He added that corporate
dominance "is going to be forced anyhow because when you
have a system that is instantly available everywhere in the
world immediately, then the old-fashioned regulatory system
has to give way."


ACTION:

Activists from around the country are heading to San
Francisco in September to make their voices heard. If you
can't make it, you can still contribute to the efforts to
free the public airwaves from corporate domination.

--Write to the Federal Communications Commission and demand
that they create common sense public interest requirements
for broadcasters operating on the public airwaves.

Chair William Kennard
Federal Communications Commission
445 12th St. SW
Washington, D.C. 20554
1-888-225-5322 (1-888-CALL FCC)
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]

--Write to the National Association of Broadcasters to let
them know that citizens of a democracy demand more substance
from the broadcasting conglomerates than they are currently
delivering. The broadcasters get free access to the airwaves
-- what does the public get in return?

National Association of Broadcasters
Edward O. Fritts, President and CEO
1771 N Street, NW
Washington, DC 20036
Phone: 202-429-5300
Fax: 202-775-3520
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]


For more background on the NAB and the broadcast industry, see: 
http://www.fair.org/nab.html

For more about the demonstrations in San Francisco, see:
http://www.mediademocracynow.org

-30-

FAIR ON THE AIR: FAIR's founder Jeff Cohen is a regular
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