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- - - - - - - - - - - - Sept. 11, 2000 | Anxious to not to let the Democrats have a monopoly on Hollywood-bashing, the campaign of Texas Gov. George W. Bush requested that one of their own be able to testify on the highly anticipated Senate Commerce Committee hearings this week over violence in TV, film and music. So Wednesday, Lynne Cheney, wife of GOP vice presidential nominee Dick Cheney and a longtime leading figure in the culture wars, will be called to testify. And she is only the latest high-profile figure from both parties eager to take part in what is shaping up to be such a congressional gangbang that representatives from the entertainment industry have decided to pull out of the hearings.
Sen. Joseph Lieberman originally beat the Republicans to the punch, announcing his intentions to testifyjust as the results of the much-discussed, one-year Federal Trade Commission study on the entertainment industry started leaking to the press. Among other charges, the report allegedly accuses Hollywood executives of directly marketing content to children that is inappropriate based on its own ratings systems. But over the weekend, according to a knowledgeable source, the Bush campaign contacted the staff of Sen. John McCain, chairman of the Commerce Committee, to see if room could be made for Cheney. On Monday, however, Mark Buse, staff director of the Commerce Committee, said that having Cheney testify was McCain's idea. "Sen. McCain invited Lynne Cheney to testify," Buse said. "The Bush campaign is very concerned about this topic. And she is an expert in this area with great credentials." As head of the National Endowment of the Humanities during the administration of President Bush, and a former co-host of CNN's "Crossfire Sunday," Cheney's role in the culture wars has primarily been to crusade against "political correctness" on university campuses. Buse said that while Cheney will attend the hearing, representatives from the entertainment industry "conveniently had to be out of town" that day. Universal Studios had originally planned to attend, but has since pulled out, he said. Isn't that kind of lame? "'Kind of' would be an understatement," Buse said. There has been so much interest in Wednesday's hearing -- in addition to Cheney, half a dozen or so members of Congress not on the Commerce Committee have asked to testify -- that the location has been moved to a larger venue, Room 216 in the Senate's Hart Office building. And the posturing continues on the campaign trail. In an interview appearing in Monday's New York Times, Gore said that he would give the entertainment industry six months to "clean up their act" before his administration would encourage the Federal Trade Commission to move against the industry in its ability to prohibit false and deceptive advertising. First Lady Hillary Clinton, stumping for her New York Senate campaign, took time out Monday at a Jewish community center to decry Hollywood's marketing practices, saying, "This is outrageous, and it must stop. I challenge this industry, which has already taken many positive steps, to look very carefully at these recommendations. I challenge it to make the changes necessary to stop marketing violent and adult products to our kids." And in an article penned by Lieberman entitled "Crude, Rude and Lewd" – being distributed to the media by the centrist Democratic Leadership Council, which is chaired by Lieberman -- the Connecticut Senator decries "not just the quantity but the quality of the dialogue and the depictions" on TV. "(T)he sexual references and behaviors have become far more graphic and explicit. Even worse, they are usually shown without moral content or social guideposts." The DLC release includes information about a poll by Democratic pollster Mark Penn indicating that "only 15 percent of respondents agreed with the entertainment industry's First Amendment rationale for avoiding any public action, while 37 percent favor a enforceable universal ratings system; 22 percent favor outright legal restrictions on content; and 17 percent favor Sen. Lieberman's approach of encouraging better self-policing by the industry."
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