NotesFAQContact Us
Collection
Advanced
Search Tips
Showing all 9 results Save | Export
Ferris, Charles D. – Public Telecommunications Review, 1978
The chairman of the Federal Communications Commission presents the principles that will guide him and the commission during his tenure as chairman. Issues discussed range from the maintenance of the commission's integrity and independent control, through equal employment, to the encouragement of new technological utilization. (RAO)
Descriptors: Administrator Role, Broadcast Industry, Communications, Federal Regulation
Ferris, Charles D. – 1980
In this address, the chairman of the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) reviews commitments he made as he took office and presents some of his views on the broadcasting industry, government regulation, and the overall communications environment. He reiterates his opposition to program censorship and notes that the FCC has been successful in…
Descriptors: Broadcast Industry, Federal Regulation, Freedom of Speech, Government Role
Ferris, Charles D. – 1978
Broadcasters should aim for diversity and excellence in programing rather than basing programing decisions on the Nielsen ratings and aiming for maximized profits. Broadcasting reflects, shapes, alters, and informs the national consciousness; entertainment programs as well as newscasts have tremendous impact on the public, and the effect of…
Descriptors: Broadcast Industry, Communications, Competition, Federal Regulation
Ferris, Charles D. – 1978
Information has become the lifeline of United States society, and consumers--especially those concerned about children--need to become concerned with the entire information phenomenon. Those who control access to information will be responsible to a great extent for the future values of society, and involved citizens should participate in shaping…
Descriptors: Broadcast Industry, Citizen Participation, Communications, Federal Regulation
Ferris, Charles D. – 1978
The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) is far more anxious to promote the First Amendment premise that broadcasters should air controversial programing than it is worried about the occasional use of "four-letter words" by broadcasters. The FCC and Supreme Court decisions in the "Pacifica" case affect only the broadcasting…
Descriptors: Broadcast Industry, Censorship, Constitutional Law, Federal Regulation
Ferris, Charles D. – 1978
If cable television is to survive in the competitive marketplace, it will have to show increased foresight in designing new services and facilities. Cable television regulations, which may have been an impediment to past growth, should be fully reviewed by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) and deleted or corrected if necessary; but cable…
Descriptors: Broadcast Industry, Cable Television, Childrens Television, Communications
Ferris, Charles D. – 1979
This speech by the chairman of the Federal Communications Commission discusses some of the issues facing the broadcasting industry concerning the First Amendment such as guidelines for the percentage of adult informational programing, the Fairness Doctrine, government censorship, regulation of news programs, and access of the electorate to…
Descriptors: Broadcast Industry, Broadcast Television, Childrens Television, Constitutional Law
Ferris, Charles D. – 1979
Viewer disenchantment with children's television can be allayed by creative programing that will also provide incentives to the broadcast industry. News and information programs, as well as entertaining and sensitive dramatizations of children's issues, have already fared well in the marketplace, proving that innovative children's programing can…
Descriptors: Broadcast Industry, Childrens Television, Commercial Television, Communication (Thought Transfer)
Ferris, Charles D. – 1978
H.R. 13015, the proposed revision of the Communications Act of 1934, is consistent in many aspects with Federal Communications Commission (FCC) trends toward greater reliance on marketplace forces than on regulation, but some portions of the bill should be reexamined before the final rewrite. First, the new bill would shift from a "public…
Descriptors: Agency Role, Broadcast Industry, Cable Television, Citizen Participation