A) City of Los Angeles v.Preferred Communications.
B) National Cable Television Assn.v.FCC.
C) Turner Broadcasting v.FCC.
D) Capital Cities Cable v.Crisp.
E) U.S.v.Southwestern Cable Co.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) it would be completely legal.
B) it would violate an act of Congress.
C) it would violate an FCC regulation.
D) it would violate state laws governing broadcast content.
E) it would violate international agreements.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) radio and television are entertainment and have no First Amendment protection.
B) the propaganda potential of the electronic media is so great that more protection is needed.
C) broadcasters are given the exclusive use of a scarce resource (the radio spectrum) and must use it "in the public interest,convenience and necessity."
D) broadcast advertising is too pervasive and persuasive to be left unregulated.
E) the broadcast media are more technically complex and need more government assistance to maintain good technical standards.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) upheld the Personal Attack Rule.
B) overturned the Personal Attack Rule.
C) ordered the FCC to exempt broadcast journalists from the FCC's equal employment opportunity (EEO) rules.
D) ordered broadcast journalists to obey the new EEO rules.
E) required broadcast journalists to give equal airtime to all political candidates.
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Multiple Choice
A) indecency is no longer prohibited on the airwaves.
B) indecency is only prohibited at night.
C) indecency is prohibited only on networks,not independent stations.
D) indecency is prohibited on the airwaves except late at night.
E) only obscenity is prohibited on the airwaves,never indecency.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) the must-carry rules.
B) the Financial Interest and Syndication Rule.
C) the Syndicated Exclusivity Rule.
D) the 1984 Cable Communications Policy Act.
E) the 1996 Telecommunications Act.
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Multiple Choice
A) the Communications Act.
B) the Telecommunications Act.
C) the Net Neutrality Act.
D) the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act.
E) All of these.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) FCC v.League of Women Voters.
B) National Cable Television Assn.v.FCC.
C) Turner Broadcasting v.FCC.
D) Comcast Corp.v.FCC.
E) FCC v.Pacifica.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) Metro Broadcasting v.FCC.
B) Adarand Constructors v.Peña.
C) Bechtel v.FCC.
D) FCC v.League of Women Voters.
E) Central Florida Enterprises v.FCC.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) none--only PBS stations must air educational programs for children.
B) one hour every day.
C) three hours per week.
D) five hours every month.
E) all stations must carry programs for children,but there is no requirement that they be "educational and informational."
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) they both said the same thing.
B) Red Lion overturned the Fairness Doctrine while League of Women Voters upheld it.
C) Red Lion upheld the Fairness Doctrine while League of Women Voters overturned it.
D) Red Lion upheld the Fairness Doctrine while League of Women Voters raised questions about its constitutionality.
E) neither case said anything about either the First Amendment or the Fairness Doctrine.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) upheld the Fairness Doctrine and the Personal Attack Rule.
B) overturned the Fairness Doctrine and the Personal Attack Rule.
C) upheld the FCC's EEO rules.
D) overturned the FCC's EEO rules.
E) overturned an FCC decision to cancel a broadcaster's license.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) doubled indecency fines.
B) increased indecency fines to about ten times their previous levels.
C) banned indecency on cable and satellite television and radio.
D) banned indecency only on cable television.
E) ordered the FCC to reconsider many of its recent indecency fines.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) RKO General v.FCC.
B) Metro Broadcasting v.FCC.
C) the 1996 Telecommunications Act.
D) Yale v.FCC.
E) Turner Broadcasting v.FCC.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) issue advertising.
B) product advertising.
C) ads for ballot propositions.
D) ads by political candidates during campaign periods.
E) all of these.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) an presidential executive order.
B) a rule of the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) .
C) the Children's Television Act of 1990 and FCC regulations adopted under the act.
D) the 1996 Telecommunications Act.
E) none of these--no such restriction exists.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) holding comparative hearings.
B) holding lotteries.
C) conducting auctions.
D) flipping a coin.
E) awarding the license to the first person or company to file an application.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) the must-carry rules.
B) the Financial Interest and Syndication Rule.
C) the Syndicated Exclusivity Rule.
D) the 1984 Cable Communications Policy Act.
E) Section 312(a) (7) .
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) politicians are entitled to free airtime.
B) politicians are not entitled to free airtime.
C) even public broadcasters may carry debates featuring only the major candidates.
D) public broadcasters must include all candidates in debates.
E) Arkansas stations had to cover candidates other than Bill Clinton.
Correct Answer
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