"Access to video delay technology"?  Sure.  But who the hell expects a
Super Bowl halftime show to be even remotely controversial?  Even with
MTV running the show.

If that's the standard the FCC is going to use, shouldn't EVERY
sporting event be on a 5- or 7-second delay, in case a streaker
decides to jump the fence and make a break for the visitors' bench?

M-D
And now, "Hooray for Everything"!

On Sep 15, 8:41 pm, Wesley McGee <[email protected]> wrote:
> http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/353929-FCC_To_Further_Invest...
>
> The FCC has reasserted its power to regulate fleeting nudity and says it
> wants to further investigate "whether CBS' indecency violation [in the Janet
> Jackson/Justin Timberlake Super Bowl reveal] was willful."
>
> "The evidence in this case strongly suggests that CBS had access to video
> delay technology at the time of the 2004 Super Bowl," the commission said
> Tuesday in a brief to the Third Circuit Appeals Court in the Janet Jackson
> Super Bowl reveal case. The FCC asked the court to remand the decision back
> to the FCC so it could investigate further its assertion that the violation
> was "willful."
>
> --
> Wesley McGee
> can shows his nipple anytime on television.
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