Land of the not so free TV?

The Melon Farmers report that US TV regulator, the Federal Communications Commission, has added an anti-indecency activist to the staff of a key office, prompting talk that the agency is poised for another crackdown on programming it deems inappropriate for the airwaves.

Penny Young Nance joined the FCC last month as an adviser in its Office of Strategic Planning and Policy Analysis. The office helps set an overall agenda for the agency, which regulates broadcasting, telecommunications and other technology.

FCC spokesman David H. Fiske said she is working part time in a post that focuses on “consumer and social issues” in broadcasting and cable. She will serve as a liaison with Capitol Hill, the industry and other activists, he said.

Nutters praised Nance’s appointment, but a frequent FCC critic said it smacks of political patronage because positions like the one Mrs. Nance has been given are usually not given to activists. She’s there to give the religious right and the conservative right a voice at the FCC. … It’s disquieting that someone who is so ideological has a position like this, said Jeffrey Chester, executive director of the Center for Digital Democracy, a consumer-advocacy group.

Nance has been a vocal critic of racy programming on the airwaves. She once worked as a lobbyist for Concerned Women for America (CWA), a group that describes its mission as working “to bring Biblical principles into all levels of public policy,” and recently stepped down from that organization’s board of directors. She also founded the Kids First Coalition, a group that opposes pornography and abortion and has called on the FCC to rein in indecency.

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