http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-503544_162-20025823-503544.htmlObama got rid of them! Now THAT'S change you can believe in, lol. Not entirely sure what the Constitutional basis for this law is, since it goes beyond public airwaves and into cable tv... meh... what do yall think
12/15/2010 7:40:38 PM
Our forefathers intended for us to have freedom of speech, not freedom of speech with inside voices.
12/15/2010 7:55:15 PM
The "Commercials Are Too Damn Loud" Party
12/15/2010 8:04:14 PM
Interstate Commerce FTW!!!
12/15/2010 8:16:09 PM
The FCC already regulates power output in a given spectrum of the airwaves, I don't see how this is really any different than that from a conceptual standpoint.
12/15/2010 8:32:29 PM
You don't? Really?
12/16/2010 12:01:55 AM
I think it's awesome. You people always bitch about elected officials never representing those that put them in office and they finally do and they're still criticized. Sheesh. Loud commercials are the #1 complaint to the FCC and has been for decades. It's no secret that they jack up the volume because people get up during commercials to pee or get something to drink. But I am sure some on the right will call this nanny state.
12/16/2010 12:40:07 AM
You can have my louder commercials.....when you pry them from my cold dead hands.
12/16/2010 9:45:25 AM
To be fair, I believe it was the senate and the house that passed it.Not Obama.
12/16/2010 10:47:46 AM
About time. Nothing like dozing off on the couch and getting startled awake by the ShamWOW guy.
12/16/2010 10:56:37 AM
IF THIS WERE A REAL ISSUE, THE FREE MARKET WOULD'VE SOLVED IT WITH AUTO-NORMALIZING TELEVISIONS
12/16/2010 11:35:43 AM
12/16/2010 12:41:56 PM
12/16/2010 1:18:06 PM
yea. both my tv and my cable box have normalizers and if u got a dvr you just cut out the ads. free market is ftw.[Edited on December 16, 2010 at 2:27 PM. Reason : x]
12/16/2010 2:26:59 PM
OMG ERRYTHANG THAT OL CONGRESS PASSES MUSS BE OBAMAS FAULT!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1
12/16/2010 2:59:57 PM
Well, if he didn't like, he wouldn't sign it. That he does, means it is his fault.
12/16/2010 3:13:58 PM
If he didn't sign it, people would claim he was abusing executive power and we were on our path to a dictatorship.Two sides of the same shit sandwich, i suppose.
12/16/2010 3:36:41 PM
he needs to pass something that requires all the 'fine print' at the end of commercials to be shown in a font large enough for someone with 20/15 vision and a 100" TV to be able to at least partially read some of it
12/16/2010 4:45:40 PM
12/16/2010 5:06:16 PM
12/17/2010 10:46:06 AM
This is something that cable and satellite providers should have been self-regulating for a while now; no idea why some of them hadn't been doing it. It's a damn shame that it took long enough for the government to step in on this issue, but I don't have a problem with it, as it's something that actually needed to be done.
12/17/2010 11:48:11 AM
^ That's a dangerous position to take when it comes to government. Just because something "needs to be done" doesn't mean that the government "needs" or has the authority or right to do it. This is especially so when we're talking about something completely non-essential like TV. If you don't like it, stop buying the service, I guarantee enough people do that and the cable companies would regulate real quick. Of course, that requires people to take responsibility for their choices, something Americans are not well known for these days.
12/17/2010 1:26:04 PM
12/17/2010 4:11:52 PM
12/17/2010 4:15:10 PM
umbrellaman wins
12/17/2010 4:37:01 PM
12/18/2010 9:44:40 AM
This is where my pragmatism kicks in over my idealism: Have taxpayers not subsidized the building out of cable networks enough that we can direct our government to establish a regulation that literally harms no one and benefits many?I'm just as wary as the ever growing government as the next libertarian leaning guy, but I find no redeeming value to society for having commercials blasting out much louder than the loudest passages of a given segment of a broadcast.
12/18/2010 10:21:11 AM
12/18/2010 10:34:56 AM
We can't go back and unwind the subsidies. Seeing as how a portion of the productive efforts of all Americans are in those lines, I don't see it draconian or government largesse in the least to insist they turn the volume down on the damn commercials.
12/18/2010 10:49:08 AM
No we can't, but neither are we obligated to continue the consequences of those subsidies. We could simply write them off as mistakes and lessons learned, and stop subsidizing in the future, rather than taking the position that since we have subsidized in the past, we should implement regulation that is predicated on the idea that we continue subsidizing.Further, that a law "harms no one" is not reason enough to implement a law. There has to be an actual need, and there has to be actual authority, neither of which appears to be present. And when we're talking about government influence and power, everything is a valid slippery slope, as every regulation is used to justify the next step in regulation. Even here, our regulation of the content of TV via the FCC, which is arguably flawed at best ad unconstitutional at worst, is used to justify regulating the volume of the content. Further regulations will be justified on the ground that we already regulate content and volume, so whatever they want to regulate next is conceptually no different.
12/18/2010 11:42:43 AM
12/18/2010 12:51:46 PM
12/19/2010 2:17:29 PM
regulation of content by the FCC is one of the most heinous violations of the first ammendment.
12/19/2010 2:25:57 PM
I can't wait to read this one
12/19/2010 2:29:05 PM
my brother is a master controller at one of your friendly triangle-area broadcast network affiliates. i don't know if this is the same thing he was talking about a month or two ago, but from what i understood, he said the wording of this was pretty terrible. i'm no expert, but i think he was complaining about the fact that there's no way a regular consumer could judge if the volume of the commercials fell outside of the acceptable range with any certainty. not to mention, shows have different volume levels and local commercials especially are quite bad at having consistent volume levels.anyway, i might be wrong about this stuff, but the person who i know with the most knowledge about this sort of thing, thought this sort of a regulation could have been done much better. perhaps there have been improvements in it since i spoke to him about it though.
12/19/2010 2:33:02 PM
12/19/2010 3:42:24 PM
12/19/2010 4:07:22 PM
12/19/2010 4:12:49 PM
12/19/2010 4:19:00 PM
12/19/2010 4:29:14 PM
I'm sorry, I must have missed the part of the constitution that granted the government exclusive ownership of the airwaves.
12/19/2010 4:38:50 PM
it's right next to the part where they talk about drivers licenses and airplanes
12/19/2010 5:23:21 PM
It's part of being a sovereign nation.[Edited on December 19, 2010 at 5:26 PM. Reason : .]
12/19/2010 5:23:46 PM
^^ Drivers licenses are a state issue, and aviation while certainly something up for debate, it's easy to argue that interstate commercial flight falls under "interstate commerce".^ And as a sovereign nation, we developed a foundation of government which clearly outlined the specific things the government could do. Regulating speech was not one of them.
12/19/2010 6:47:31 PM
lol
12/19/2010 7:01:34 PM
^^It doesn't regulate speech. It regulates the licenses holders who hold license to the public airwaves. That is why the FCC obscenity regulations only apply to UHF, VHF and not cable television.You can't just ignore facts when it pleases you.
12/19/2010 7:12:05 PM
The FCCs regulation (if they even be allowed to regulate) should be limited to operational regulations. Frequency reservations, transmission power regulation, protocol standard definitions, etc...Content is completely seperate from transport. If they started censoring the internet (which you claim the FCC has the right to do) would you be fine with that? I mean commie it up all you want but lets be honest about it. You're an authoritarian.[Edited on December 19, 2010 at 10:26 PM. Reason : a]
12/19/2010 10:25:47 PM
12/19/2010 10:38:43 PM
12/19/2010 11:06:54 PM
It's not up for debate; because it is a fact. The public owns the airwaves. The public (government) gets to make the rules that licensees have to abide by and agree to when they get a license for those public airwaves.No one is forcing them to use the public airwaves. If they don't like it they can go the cable/satellite route.[Edited on December 19, 2010 at 11:12 PM. Reason : .]
12/19/2010 11:11:35 PM