The Parents Television Council in the News
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FEATURED ARTICLES
05.27.08 - Sheltered from bad TV, poor influences - Washington Times 05.04.08 - Channel Changer - Washington Post 04.28.08 - Grand Theft Ready to Roll - San Francisco Chronicle 04.24.08 - Hooray for Censorship - The American Spectator 03.10.08 - Bring the Family: A resurgence in family programming for all ages - Broadcasting & Cable 03.02.08 - Supreme Court may rethink broadcast indecency - LA Times 01.28.08 - 52 Stations Hit with $27,500 Indecency Fines - TVNewsday 01.26.08 - FCC Seeks $1.43 Million Fine Over 'NYPD Blue' Episode - Wall Street Journal 01.17.08 - Keaton's use of obscenity adds fodder to TV debate - LA Times 01.03.08 - Now Playing: Family Entertainment Central - Townhall.com01.02.08 - Parents group praises sponsors - Washington Times
FEATURED TV & RADIO SPOTS discusses discusses the controversial Gossip Girl ad on CNN. Click here to Watch!
► Melissa Henson discusses Fox's new show Moment of Truth on CNN's Showbiz Tonight. Click here to Watch!
► PTC President, Tim Winter discusses a la carte cable on CNBC's Power Lunch. Click here to Watch!
► Senior Director of Projects, Melissa Henson discusses family-friendly entertainment options on Fox's Your World with Neil Cavuto. Click here to Watch!
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"Almost single- Time Magazine, 4/28/05 "The PTC is arguably the most powerful single force in broadcasting today. With 20 full-time staff employees manning offices in Los Angeles and Virginia, the PTC does what the FCC does not – it monitors all network programming. When its reviewers find something they believe objectionable, the PTC mobilizes its mailing list to use form letters to complain to the FCC." Austin Chronicle 2/18/05 "The PTC was a major force in the public outcry over Janet Jackson's breast-baring Super Bowl half-time performance last year. By the organization's estimate, one-fourth of the 530,828 complaints that poured in came from council members or those informed of the performance by the group's e-mail alert." Houston Chronicle 1/1/05 "The Parents Television Council is the big 800-pound gorilla in the room," says David Carlin, an attorney at Reed Smith, who specializes in indecency cases. Financial Times, 6/14/05 "The Parents Television Council is changing business as usual from Hollywood to Madison Avenue." Daily Times-Call, 1/3/05
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