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Tipped Scales: Finding Justice in the Siegelman Case
Siegelman and the Fairness Doctrine
by Scott Horton When CBS Newss 60 Minutes put out its report The Prosecution of Governor Siegelman (for which I was repeatedly interviewed) one sole affiliate, the Northern Alabama station WHNT, suffered mysterious technical problems that blocked 12 minutesvirtually the whole Siegelman story, but nothing else in the programon its initial airing. The Washington Independent weighs in today with a very solid exploration of the issue:
"WHNT first claimed the blackout was the result of a faulty feed originating with CBS in New York. A more thorough investigation, station officials later said, revealed that the trouble was a local equipment failure preventing WHNT from receiving the CBS signala situation remedied 12 minutes into the Siegelman segment. In response to local complaints, WHNT re-ran the segment four hours after it was initially scheduled, and again the following evening. But the re-runs did little to cool the suspicions of Democrats. FCC Commissioner Michael Copps, a Democrat, pushed hard for an official inquiry, which was initiated nine days following the blackout."
Legal experts and media watchdogs say that blackouts of such
length are extremely rare, particularly during peak viewing hours.
Blackouts, of some duration, probably happen all the time, said Aaron
Craig, communications director of Free Press, a non-partisan media
reform group.
Now, do they happen during prime-time, when the story is
focused on potential corruption in the same state? At best, its an
unfortunate coincidence.
Botein agreed, saying that the
sophistication of todays broadcast equipment combined with the
commercial appeal of the program in question makes such a coincidence
highly unlikely.
A show like 60 Minutes gets incredible ratings,
Botein said. A 12-minute blackout? Itd never happen. Theyd lose
half their audience. . .
While WHNT is owned by Oak Hill
Capital, a Texas-based private equity firm with a long history of
support for Democratic candidates and causes, the day-to-day operations
are run by a newly created Oak Hill venture called Local TV LLC. Based
in Kentucky, Local TV is headed by Robert Lawrence, a long-time GOP
supporter whose many political contributions include $2,000 to the Bush
campaign in 2004, and $7,000 to the Republican National Committee in
2000.
Local TVs previous CEO, Randy Michaels, a controversial figure
who once headed the radio division at Clear Channel Communications, the
nations largest radio conglomerate, also has a long history of ties to
conservative figures. Michaels is credited with discovering the popular
conservative talk show host Sean Hannity in the early 1990s. He also
signed enormous radio deals with Rush Limbaugh and Dr. Laura
Schlessinger, two powerhouses on the conservative talk-radio circuit.
But
the major point of the Washington Independent piece goes to the
Fairness Doctrine. Previously, a blackout resulting from an editorial
decision rather than genuine technical problems could easily cause a
station to lose its license. No longer.
In this case, theyre
certainly not going to pull their license over it, said Clay Calvert,
communications professor at Pennsylvania State University and co-author
of Mass Media Law, the nations top-selling undergraduate
communications law textbook. At most, it might merit a warning. Considering the partisan make-up of the FCC, it might not even merit
that. The commissions notice of inquiry falls short of an
investigation. And if Martin, the panels Republican chairman, accepts
the stations claim that the trouble was strictly technical, then the
process could end there.
60 Minutes has been busy at work on
the second installment of its series on Siegelman, which is likely to
air this Sunday. It will be interesting to see if there is a recurrence
of technical problems.