25 comments

  • travem 2 hours ago

    > ESPN has a history of noncompliance with the Commission’s EAS rules and was fined in 2015 and 2021 for EAS violations.

    Sounds like the previous fines didn't sufficiently motivate the correct behavior unfortunately.

    • deathanatos 2 hours ago

      The fine is a pittance. I usually scale these to a median household income, let's call it $80k. A quick Google says ESPN's revenue is $2.48B/y. To ESPN, this feels like how a $2.73 fine feels to a median household, or a $0.45 / instance fine.

      As the article notes, it's the statutory maximum, so the FCC's hands appear a bit tied.

      • mmooss an hour ago

        The fine is a signal that the FCC is paying attention. The FCC has a lot of power in addition to this fine and ESPN doesn't want to provoke them. If ESPN behaves badly enough, Congress can give the FCC what it needs. It's better business to just pay it, move on, and stop using the tones.

      • lotsofpulp 2 hours ago

        I would use Disney’s figures.

        • deathanatos 2 hours ago

          Oh I was definitely tempted to! But the ESPN-only revenue was already a stark enough contrast, and technically Disney only owns 80%. (Though I suppose you could do a weighted average of the two parent companies' revenues.)

  • ryandrake 2 hours ago

    This is what happens when you turn Marketing loose and tell them to do whatever it takes to get the viewer's attention, and the consequences are immeasurably small. Companies will converge on "abuse." Reminds me of radio advertisements playing loud police sirens or car horns, to falsely capture the attention (panic) of drivers listening to the radio.

  • chriscjcj 2 hours ago

    Back in August 2019, Kimmel's show engaged in the same transgression. Since then, Disney requires every employee that works in TV or a related industry (including ESPN) to regularly watch and complete an online course about EAS tones. Not enough I guess.

    https://www.upi.com/Top_News/US/2019/08/16/FCC-fines-Jimmy-K...

  • pimlottc 3 hours ago

    Is there a video of the offending ad somewhere? I couldn’t find it with some basically googling.

  • trev9065 3 hours ago

    $150k well spent on marketing

  • anigbrowl 3 hours ago

    Good. It's a pity the statutory penalty is so low.

  • notatoad 3 hours ago

    does anybody have more information on what these "emergency alert tones" are? is it talking about tones on specific frequencies that trigger some sort of special handling of the broadcast, or is it simply that they used a siren sound in an advertisment?

  • BillSaysThis 3 hours ago

    lol ESPN even admitted they did this intentionally, somebody in marketing surely must have lost their job.

  • orangeartist 2 hours ago

    [dead]

  • 2 hours ago
    [deleted]