Producers To FCC: Bring Back Fin-Syn
Nearly 20 years after the FCC threw out its so-called fin-syn rules, the Caucus for Producers, Writers & Directors believes it's time to bring them back.
Commenting on the FCC inquiry into its various media ownership rules, the Caucus asked that the FCC require that each network set aside 25% of its primetime schedule for programs supplied by independent producers.
It also asked that the networks not be allowed to acquire an interest in the copyright or syndication rights of such programs.
The proposed rules are similar to the financial interest and syndication rules that the FCC jettisoned in 1993, but they would apply to cable as well as broadcast networks.
"Prior to the repeal of fin-syn there was robust competition among independent producers," the Caucas says in its five-page filing. "This competition resulted in high quality programming that reflected a wide range of views.
"Since the demise of fin-syn there has been a crippling of competition and decline in diversity of views presented."
The FCC's inquiry is aimed primarily at limits on ownership of broadcast stations and newspapers, but the Caucus latched on to an FCC question asking how it should assess the impact of ownership rules on content creators.
"Continued vertical consolidation of media by definition decreases competition and threatens the diversity of views expressed in a marketplace of ideas dominated by a handful of companies that control the production and distribution of content," the Caucus says.

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