Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
“So the ban was under the fairness doctrine. Can’t wait till that is applied by a future FCC head applies it to Fox News, Twitter, NYpost, WSJ, Facebook, etc.”
The Fairness Doctrine was a great policy but it was eliminated by Ronald Reagan. Interesting that CBS resurrected it. I doubt that anyone now working in network news ever worked under it.
You do know the FCC does not have the same authority over cable that it does over broadcast?
Big difference.
But, CBS is challenging Colbert's comments.
FCC Chairman Brendan Carr, key author of Project 2025: “Congress passed the equal time provision for a very specific reason. They did not want the media leads in Hollywood and in New York to put their thumbs on the scale and pick their winners and losers in primaries and general elections. That’s the point.”
That includes Fox Entertainment News, right Brenda⁉️
Fox is not a broadcaster, mysogynist moron.
Anonymous wrote:
“So the ban was under the fairness doctrine. Can’t wait till that is applied by a future FCC head applies it to Fox News, Twitter, NYpost, WSJ, Facebook, etc.”
The Fairness Doctrine was a great policy but it was eliminated by Ronald Reagan. Interesting that CBS resurrected it. I doubt that anyone now working in network news ever worked under it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
“So the ban was under the fairness doctrine. Can’t wait till that is applied by a future FCC head applies it to Fox News, Twitter, NYpost, WSJ, Facebook, etc.”
The Fairness Doctrine was a great policy but it was eliminated by Ronald Reagan. Interesting that CBS resurrected it. I doubt that anyone now working in network news ever worked under it.
You do know the FCC does not have the same authority over cable that it does over broadcast?
Big difference.
But, CBS is challenging Colbert's comments.
FCC Chairman Brendan Carr, key author of Project 2025: “Congress passed the equal time provision for a very specific reason. They did not want the media leads in Hollywood and in New York to put their thumbs on the scale and pick their winners and losers in primaries and general elections. That’s the point.”
That includes Fox Entertainment News, right Brenda⁉️
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
“So the ban was under the fairness doctrine. Can’t wait till that is applied by a future FCC head applies it to Fox News, Twitter, NYpost, WSJ, Facebook, etc.”
The Fairness Doctrine was a great policy but it was eliminated by Ronald Reagan. Interesting that CBS resurrected it. I doubt that anyone now working in network news ever worked under it.
You do know the FCC does not have the same authority over cable that it does over broadcast?
Big difference.
But, CBS is challenging Colbert's comments.
FCC Chairman Brendan Carr, key author of Project 2025: “Congress passed the equal time provision for a very specific reason. They did not want the media leads in Hollywood and in New York to put their thumbs on the scale and pick their winners and losers in primaries and general elections. That’s the point.”
That includes Fox Entertainment News, right Brenda⁉️
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
“So the ban was under the fairness doctrine. Can’t wait till that is applied by a future FCC head applies it to Fox News, Twitter, NYpost, WSJ, Facebook, etc.”
The Fairness Doctrine was a great policy but it was eliminated by Ronald Reagan. Interesting that CBS resurrected it. I doubt that anyone now working in network news ever worked under it.
You do know the FCC does not have the same authority over cable that it does over broadcast?
Big difference.
But, CBS is challenging Colbert's comments.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
“So the ban was under the fairness doctrine. Can’t wait till that is applied by a future FCC head applies it to Fox News, Twitter, NYpost, WSJ, Facebook, etc.”
The Fairness Doctrine was a great policy but it was eliminated by Ronald Reagan. Interesting that CBS resurrected it. I doubt that anyone now working in network news ever worked under it.
You do know the FCC does not have the same authority over cable that it does over broadcast?
Big difference.
But, CBS is challenging Colbert's comments.
Anonymous wrote:
“So the ban was under the fairness doctrine. Can’t wait till that is applied by a future FCC head applies it to Fox News, Twitter, NYpost, WSJ, Facebook, etc.”
The Fairness Doctrine was a great policy but it was eliminated by Ronald Reagan. Interesting that CBS resurrected it. I doubt that anyone now working in network news ever worked under it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s on the way out but pretending that Anderson Cooper and Stephen Colbert are important voices is weird.
The best journalists work at real news sources like Dropsite, Mintpress, the Grayzone etc. CBS has been useless stenography to power for a long time.
If they aren't important voices, then let them run their shows and no one will watch.