CBS, Inc v Federal Communications Commission - définition. Qu'est-ce que CBS, Inc v Federal Communications Commission
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Qu'est-ce (qui) est CBS, Inc v Federal Communications Commission - définition

1994 UNITED STATES SUPREME COURT CASE
Turner Broadcasting v. Federal Communications Commission (II); Turner Broadcasting v. FCC; Turner Broadcasting System Inc. v. FCC; Turner Broadcasting System v. Federal Communications Commission; Turner v. FCC; 512 U.S. 622; Turner Broadcasting v Federal Communications Commission; Turner Broadcasting v. Federal Communications Commission; Turner Broadcasting System, Inc. v FCC

CBS, Inc. v. Federal Communications Commission         
1981 UNITED STATES SUPREME COURT CASE
CBS, Inc. v Federal Communications Commission
CBS, Inc vs. FCC (453 US 367) is a 1981 United States Supreme Court decision finding that the Federal Communications Act of 1934 created a new, individual right to broadcast access for candidates for federal office.
FCC         
  • FCC commissioners inspect the latest in television, December 1, 1939.
  • Former Federal Communications Commission Office in [[Washington, D.C.]]
  • Chairman]] [[Paul Atlee Walker]], Standing (l-r) [[T.A.M. Craven]], [[Thad H. Brown]], [[Norman S. Case]], and [[George Henry Payne]].
  • FCC seal prior to 2020
INDEPENDENT U.S. GOVERNMENT AGENCY
F.C.C.; Fcc; FCC (US); USFCC; US FCC; FCC; Federal Communications Commision; Federal Communication Commission; Federal Communications Committee; Wireless white space; United States Federal Communications Commission; F.C.C; The Federal Communications Commission; FCC Commissioners; FCC Commissioner; The Federal Communications Commission (FCC); Federal Communications Commission (FCC); US Federal Communications Commission; FCC commissioner; U.S. Federal Communications Commission; David A. Bray; The F.C.C.; FCC Intergovernmental Advisory Committee; Freeze of 1948
Federal Communications Commission (Reference: org., USA)
FCC         
  • FCC commissioners inspect the latest in television, December 1, 1939.
  • Former Federal Communications Commission Office in [[Washington, D.C.]]
  • Chairman]] [[Paul Atlee Walker]], Standing (l-r) [[T.A.M. Craven]], [[Thad H. Brown]], [[Norman S. Case]], and [[George Henry Payne]].
  • FCC seal prior to 2020
INDEPENDENT U.S. GOVERNMENT AGENCY
F.C.C.; Fcc; FCC (US); USFCC; US FCC; FCC; Federal Communications Commision; Federal Communication Commission; Federal Communications Committee; Wireless white space; United States Federal Communications Commission; F.C.C; The Federal Communications Commission; FCC Commissioners; FCC Commissioner; The Federal Communications Commission (FCC); Federal Communications Commission (FCC); US Federal Communications Commission; FCC commissioner; U.S. Federal Communications Commission; David A. Bray; The F.C.C.; FCC Intergovernmental Advisory Committee; Freeze of 1948
¦ abbreviation (in the US) Federal Communications Commission.

Wikipédia

Turner Broadcasting System, Inc. v. FCC

Turner Broadcasting v. Federal Communications Commission, 512 U.S. 622 (1994), is the first of two United States Supreme Court cases dealing with the must-carry rules imposed on cable television companies. Turner Broadcasting v. Federal Communications Commission (II), 520 U.S. 180 (1997) was the second. Turner I established that cable television companies were indeed First Amendment speakers but didn't decide whether the federal regulation of their speech infringed upon their speech rights. In Turner II the court decided that the must-carry provisions were constitutional.

Under the Miami Herald v. Tornillo case, it was unconstitutional to force a newspaper to run a story the editors would not have included absent a government statute because it was compelled speech which could not pass the strict scrutiny of a compelling state interest being achieved with the least restrictive means necessary to achieve the state interest. However, under the rule of Red Lion Broadcasting Co. v. FCC the High Court held that a federal agency could regulate broadcast stations (TV and radio) with far greater discretion. In order for federal agency regulation of broadcast media to pass constitutional muster, it need only serve an important state interest and need not narrowly tailor its regulation to the least restrictive means.