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Big Media, Little Kids
Media Consolidation and Children's Television Programming, May 2003

Big
Media, Little Kids: Media Consolidation and Children's Television Programming
- 2003
This 16-page study on media duopolies in Los Angeles suggests that
changes to current ownership rules will seriously impact children's programming
nationwide.
Download (327K)

Introduction
The Federal Communications Commission is currently considering modifying
or eliminating existing media ownership rules. Children's advocates
are concerned that any changes to these rules could negatively affect
the already limited amount and types of programming available for
children. In order to inform the Commission's upcoming rulemaking,
Children Now conducted the first study ever to examine the availability
and diversity of children's programming in an increasingly consolidated
media marketplace. Children Now selected Los Angeles as a case study
for this research because it is the second largest media market
in the country and two duopolies now exist among its television
stations. The study compares the children's programming schedules
from 1998, when the market's seven major commercial broadcast television
stations were owned by seven different companies, to 2003, after
consolidation reduced the number to five. The findings suggest that
changes to current ownership policies will have a serious impact
on the availability and diversity of children's programming.
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