Station owners, network executives, and critics of media "indecency" huddled in private last week to figure out what to do about the state of radio and TV. After a whole day, they pledged to do better. "The proof is in the pudding," FCC Commissioner Michael Copps said. "Not 350 people attending a summit or putting together a task force, but what is put on the airwaves and whether broadcasters do anything to clean them up."
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