Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
For a long time the FCC mostly listened to TV and radio companies and ignored ordinary viewers. A church complained that a Mississippi station was promoting segregation, but the FCC refused to give the church a real hearing. The church kept appealing, and a judge eventually revoked the station’s license, saying citizens have a right to challenge broadcasters. That court fight changed things so the public can now raise many concerns (race, children’s shows, violence, political fairness) at license renewal hearings.
Logic Breakdown
Look for the passage's central claim about the effect of the church's legal challenge on FCC practice—focus on the paragraphs describing the 1964–1967 case and its aftermath.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage1.Which one of the following most accurately expresses the main point of the passage?
Correct Answer
A
The passage's main point is that the United Church of Christ's challenge produced a precedent that brought public input into broadcast licensing. Support: 'A landmark case changed the course of that history.'; 'The case established a formidable precedent for opening up to the public the world of broadcasting.'; 'Subsequent rulings have supported the right of the public to question the performance of radio and television licensees before the FCC at renewal time every three years.'; and '...are now discussed at licensing proceedings because of the church's intervention.' These statements directly state that the church's efforts caused public input to be considered in licensing proceedings.
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