ACLU ‘Howls’ Against FCC Destroying the Best Poems of a Generation (10/3/2007)
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: October 3, 2007 Contact: media@dcaclu.org
Washington, DC – On the 50th
anniversary of a court ruling that deemed Allen Ginsberg’s ‘Howl’ not obscene,
the American Civil Liberties Union lamented an ironic reversal of First
Amendment rights. A New York public radio station chose not to air the poem in
its news story commemorating the decision, fearful of massive FCC fines that
would have effectively shut down the station. WBAI instead posted the poem
online, out of the reach of the FCC.
‘Howl,’ which winds through the beat-era landscape of sex, drugs and madness,
contains enough of the FCC’s banned words to crush the $4 million operating
budget of Pacifica station WBAI . The fine for ‘Howl’ would have been $325,000
for each word. The FCC has ramped up its power to punish broadcasters that air
expletives or indecency, regardless of the intention or cultural relevance.
The following can be attributed to ACLU Legislative Counsel Marv Johnson:
"It’s no longer accurate to say free speech has rolled back to the fifties
– it’s worse now. A radio station cannot
possibly celebrate the First Amendment by being forced to gag its announcers and
point to a website. ‘Howl’ captured the essence of a society on the brink of
explosion, and the ‘Howl’ obscenity decision marked a forward march toward
greater free speech. If the FCC and our lawmakers want to repeat the repression
of the 1950s, they should remember that even then the country was inching toward
more freedom, not less."
For more information on a related ACLU First Amendment campaign visit:
www.aclu.org/bleep
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