[lit-ideas] Don't Howl

  • From: "Andreas Ramos" <andreas@xxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: "Lit-Ideas" <lit-ideas@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Wed, 3 Oct 2007 08:35:47 -0700

'Howl' too hot to hear/50 years after poem ruled not obscene, radio fears to air it


Joe Garofoli, Chronicle Staff Writer
Tuesday, October 2, 2007 (SF Chronicle)

  Fifty years ago today, a San Francisco Municipal Court judge ruled that
Allen Ginsberg's Beat-era poem "Howl" was not obscene. Yet today, a New
York public broadcasting station decided not to air the poem, fearing that
the Federal Communications Commission will find it indecent and crush the
network with crippling fines.

  Free-speech advocates see tremendous irony in how Ginsberg's epic poem -
which lambastes the consumerism and conformism of the 1950s and heralds a
budding American counterculture - is, half a century later, chilled by a
federal government crackdown on the broadcasting of provocative language.

  In the new media landscape, the "Howl" controversy illustrates how
indecency standards differ on the Internet and on the public airwaves.
Instead of broadcasting the poem on the air today, New York
listener-supported radio station WBAI will include a reading of the poem
in a special online-only program called "Howl Against Censorship." It will
be posted on www.pacifica.org, the Internet home of the Berkeley-based
Pacifica Foundation, because online sites do not fall under the FCC's
purview.

  "Why, 50 years later after a judge ruled that children could read this
poem, people are afraid the courts will say that their ears shouldn't hear
it," said Bill Collins, a constitutional law instructor and First
Amendment advocate who is leading a small group of authors, broadcasters
and free-speech advocates pushing to broadcast the poem eventually. "Yet
they can go on the Internet and see far, far worse things."

  Another irony: WBAI, the Pacifica Foundation station in New York that
plans to post "Howl" online, is the same station that took on the FCC more
than 30 years ago over the right to air George Carlin's comedy routine
featuring the "seven dirty words." The challenge led to a 1978 Supreme
Court decision governing what naughty words can be broadcast and when.

  Pacifica's attorney for FCC issues, John Crigler, thinks airing "Howl"
would be "a great test case" in the current environment. But he
understands why WBAI won't broadcast "Howl," even between the hours of 10
p.m. and 6 a.m., the hours the FCC has cordoned off for rougher language.

  WBAI program director Bernard White fears that the FCC will fine the
station $325,000 for every one of Ginsberg's dirty-word bombs. If each
Pacifica station that aired the poem - and possibly repeated it - were to
be fined for airing "Howl," it could mean millions of dollars in fines.

  The potential impact of such penalties is daunting to a commercial-free
station with a $4 million annual budget whose financial state White
described as "in the black, but we're surrounded by a lot of red ink. A
fine like that might crush us."

  Interim Pacifica Foundation executive director Dan Siegel said, "And I
think they're being optimistic with that financial assessment." Siegel
said each Pacifica station is free to air the program if it wishes, but he
didn't know if any planned to.

  But with a budget of $18 million for all of its five stations, Siegel
said, "it might make more sense for CBS or someone like them to take on a
risk like this."

  So the poem that begins "I saw the best minds of my generation destroyed
by madness" finds itself an odd bedfellow in the battle against the FCC
with entertainers like Nicole Richie and Cher, both of whom were deemed to
cross the FCC's dirty-words line that free-speech advocates say is
constantly shifting.

  Last month, several public broadcasting outlets - including San
Francisco's KQED - broadcast "clean" versions of Ken Burns' World War II
documentary "The War" because they feared the FCC would punish them for
airing four four-letter words that turn up over the course of the visually
graphic 14-hour documentary about the brutality of war.

  At last month's Emmy Awards broadcast, the Fox network censored three
instances in which performers said words that the network felt could land
it an FCC fine. One involved comedian Ray Romano using the word
"screwing." In another instance, a performer mouthed, but didn't say, a
four-letter word. The third was actress Sally Field using the word
"goddamn" to describe her opposition to the war in Iraq.

  Free-speech advocates and broadcasters say uncertainty about
appropriateness is rooted in two recent cases that are wending their way
through the court system.

  Last month, attorneys for CBS asked a federal appeals court to overturn a
$550,000 fine the FCC imposed for airing singer Janet Jackson's exposed
breast during her infamous "wardrobe malfunction" in the 2004 Super Bowl
halftime show. The FCC said that even though the exposure lasted only
9/16th of a second, CBS failed to exercise proper control of its
"employees" - Jackson and halftime show co-star Justin Timberlake.

In June, the Second U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that the FCC acted
"arbitrarily and capriciously" when it planned to penalize Fox for
"fleeting expletives" uttered by Cher and Richie at the Billboard Music
awards shows in 2002 and 2003 respectively. The network's attorneys said
the FCC hadn't punished such "fleeting expletives" since the 1978 Pacifica
case involving WBAI and Carlin's seven dirty words.

  But while Pacifica's Crigler said "Howl" would be a good test case for
this new landscape, University of Virginia law professor and former FCC
Commissioner Glen O. Robinson said "it is best to let the other cases go
through the system first."

  "Maybe the commission would look differently on it if we were talking
about Shakespeare, but Ginsberg isn't Shakespeare," he said.

  But in an era in which a bottomless well of profanity and pornography is
available online, why should it matter that "Howl" can't be broadcast on
the radio? Finding "Howl" is a quick online search away for anyone old
enough to access a computer.

"But you still have to have a computer," said Janet Coleman, arts director
at WBAI, who is airing a program Wednesday about "Howl" with San
Francisco's iconic poet and City Lights Books owner Lawrence Ferlinghetti
and others. Like other station employees, she feels frustrated by the
current atmosphere.

"This is about the public airwaves. If we can't control what goes on them,
then how much freedom do we really have?" she said.

  The power of Ginsberg's poem isn't lost on Ferlinghetti, who faced jail
time and a fine 50 years ago for publishing "Howl." In August,
Ferlinghetti joined Collins' group of free-speech advocates, writers and
attorneys in asking WBAI to air the poem.

  In an interview to be broadcast today on WBAI to commemorate the 50th
anniversary of the poem's legal victory, Ferlinghetti was asked what
Ginsberg, who died in 1997, would have said about the broadcast
controversy.

  "Ah, well, I'm sure he'd have plenty to say about it. I often lament that
he isn't around to say it," Ferlinghetti told WBAI.

  "As Allen Ginsberg's original publisher and editor, for most of his life,
I look at the present situation as a repeat in spades of what happened in
the 1950s, which was also a repressive period," he said. "The current FCC
policy wasn't conceived just for poetry, but when applied to the case of
Allen Ginsberg's poem 'Howl,' it amounts to government censorship of an
important critique of modern civilization, especially of America and its
consumerist society, whose breath is money, still.

  "It's such a hypocritical concept of American culture in which children
are regularly exposed to adult programming in the mass media, with
subjects ranging from sexual to criminal to state-sponsored terrorism,
while at the same time they are not allowed to hear poetry far less
explicit," Ferlinghetti said. "I suggest the FCC ban all television
newscasts until after 10 p.m., when children won't be listening."


Howl can be read at http://www.artvilla.com/wordplay/?p=675




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