Front Page Fan Shop Fantasy Garage Tickets Fantasy Garage Opinions Contact

Click here:

Front Page->>Page 2 Stories

Site Navigation
Main Page
NEW! Casino
Letters to the Editor
Raceshop
Race Tickets
Classifieds
T-Shirt Shop
The Wire
Store.NASCAR.com
Humor




Top Stories from the Cup Scene Daily Front Page





160x240_10656

Cup Scene Daily Marketplace



NEW Stuff in the RACESHOP!CLICK HERE




Check out the NEW T-Shirt Shop
Click HERE!

Fox Sports takes heat over Bristol broadcast

March 28

The American Family Association is asking members to file an indecency complaint against Fox. Its last call for indecency complaints--against NBC's Las Vegas--generated drew over 100,000 e-mails to the FCC

AFA which filed indecency complaints against CBS' Without a Trace and most recently Vegas, sent out an alert Monday asking its members to complain to the FCC about Fox's coverage of a Sunday NASCAR race, the Food City 500, in which a member of driver Martin Truex's race team referred to a car in a post-race interview as a "piece of s**t."

The FCC two weeks ago fined stations carrying Without a Trace a total of $3.6 million. In the same package of proposed indecency fines against almost a dozen broadcasts, it made clear that variations of the s-word, including those involving owls and bulls, could be found indecent, proposing hefty fines against several variations.

Fox Sports spokesman Dan Bell points out that race announcer Mike Joy immediately apologized, with Bell saying: "We are very sorry that comment escaped our screening process, We take audio very seriously and make painstaking efforts to offer only the best. We will continue to evaluate our policy but as of now there is no delay in place during our live coverage."

AFA has been ramping up its anti-indecency efforts including making it easier to file online complaints. While, theoretically it only takes one complaint to generate an inquiry, and additional complaints don't make something more or less indecency, past and current FCC Chairmen have pointed to the volume of complaints when releasing their proposed fines.

NBC took some heat in October 2004 for NASCAR driver Dale Earnhardt Jr.'s S-word in an on-air interview, and last fall TNT said it would not institute a tape delay after it caught some flak over an s-word--apparently NASCAR's curse of choice--that slipped out of driver Robby Gordon in a post-race interview.

Unlike broadcast, cable is not subject to FCC indecency fines.

Greg Engle, the Editor of the Cup Scene Daily is seeking employment within the motorsports journalism industry. If you are interested, please contact him at:
greg@cupscene.com

BACK TO FRONT PAGE<

Store.NASCAR.com

728x90_10673