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The FCC is clamping down on inappropriate shows/commercials on TV and it appears that they aren't just focusing on currently broadcasting videos. A couple weeks ago, we reported that WPIX New York was fined $15,000 by the for violating its limits on TV advertising in kids shows eight times. The Federal Communications Commission then slapped a $12,000 proposed fine on KWSB-TV San Diego for violating its children's-TV ad limits. It appears that the FCC is continuing to fine other channels that aired the dreaded GameBoy E-Reader ad during the Pokemon anime.

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FCC Fines KHCW For Pokemon Ad


Houston station fined $12,000 for airing Pokemon advertisement
By John Eggerton -- Broadcasting & Cable, 8/31/2007 1:02:00 PM

Add another $12,000 to Pokemon's tab. That is how much the FCC has proposed fining KHCW(TV) Houston, Tex., for violating the FCC's limits on commercials in kids TV shows, including a program-length commercial triggered by an ad in the Pokemon show.

The FCC has fined numerous stations for an ad for the GameBoy E-Reader on the defunct WB Network that aired during the show and featured a fleeting glimpse of a Pokemon character. The FCC has said that any reference to a character in a show in an ad within that show turns the entire show into an ad (got that?).

The station also admitted to airing two other program-length commercials and exceeding the ad limits--10.5 minutes per hour on weekend, 12.5 on weekdays--by 90 seconds. The benchmark fine for the commercial violations is $8,000, but the FCC bumped it up, citing the number of violations.

The FCC took no action against Fox's KTTV(TV) Los Angeles for admitted ad limit violations. Although the station said it had exceeded the limits eight times, that was for a six-year period and amounted to under two minutes total. The FCC said that was minimal and took no action.

The commission also admonished--an official black mark--but did not fine Paxson's WPXJ-TV West Palm Beach, Fla., for failing to report the age ranges of its kids shows to electronic program guide publishers. All the stations volunteered the violations when filing for license renewals.


Source: http://www.broadcastingcable.com/