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 passage statements about the church's legal appeals and their consequences; choose the option that best matches the passage's depiction that court recourse produced concrete protections and broadened public participation.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage4.Based on information presented in the passage, with which one of the following statements would the author be most likely to agree?
Correct Answer
C
The passage shows that the church's appeals to the courts produced concrete results that protected public interests and opened broadcasting to public scrutiny. Support: "The church appealed the FCC's decision in court, and in 1967 was granted the right to a public hearing ..." and the judge "took the unprecedented step of revoking the station's license ... ruling that the church members were performing a public service." The author then states that "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 ... are now discussed at licensing proceedings because of the church's intervention." These sentences together directly support that recourse to the courts by a citizens' group was an effective means of protecting public interests.
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