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9 UCLA Ent. L. Rev. [i] (2001-2002)

handle is hein.journals/uclaetrlr9 and id is 1 raw text is: UCLA ENTERTAINMENT
LAW REVIEW
Volume 9                     Issue 1                    Fall 2001
ARTICLES
Broadcasting Industry Ethics, the First Amendment and
Televised Violence
John Alan Cohan ............................................      1
Today, there is an unprecedented level of gratuitous violence on network
television. The broadcasting industry as trustee of the airwaves is required to
broadcast in the public interest, with the fiduciary obligation to remedy
concerns about gratuitous televised violence. This paper shows a causal link
between televised violence and antisocial behavior in children and adults,
based on extensive social science data, and argues that televised violence is a
public health issue analogous to smoking and cancer. This paper will also
discuss how gratuitous violence on television may be regulated in a manner
similar to obscenity under Eclipse Enterprises, Inc. v. Gulotta, and how a new
tort has recently emerged: negligent incitement of harmful or outrageous
conduct, or aiding and abetting another to commit harmful acts. This paper
will finally offer solutions to the problem, including nonviolent programming,
teaching audiences critical viewing, parental responsibility, channeling or
zoning, outright banning of violent programming, balanced programming,
parental advisories, teaching broadcasting ethics in graduate school, consumer
boycotts, and taxing broadcasters for violent programming by charging a
spectrum fee for use of the airwaves.
The Statutory Overriding of Controlled Composition Clauses
Mario F. Gonzalez, Esq .....................................    29
It has been well-publicized that the Digital Performance Right In Sound
Recordings Act of 1995 accorded copyright owners of sound recordings a
limited exclusive right of public performance in their sound recordings by
means of a digital audio transmission. However, less attention has been given
to the fact that the DPRA also amended Section 115 of the Copyright Act to
provide that digital phonorecord deliveries are subject to compulsory licensing
under that section. A careful reading of the DPRA suggests that that, insofar
as digital phonorecord deliveries are concerned, Congress may have intended
for the statutory rates to override the controlled rates in record companies'

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