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The report from the USC Annenberg School for Communications studied 74 television stations in 58 of the top 60 markets in the last 30 days before the election. Of that group, 23 stations had made a public commitment to meeting the 5/30 standard. The 74 stations were selected because they had received the most money in political advertising.
The researchers "wanted to see whether a White House panel's recommendation of airing 5 minutes of candidate centered discourse (CCD) a night in the last month of a campaign had an impact." The Annenberg School for Communications based its research on a request by the Gore Commission, an entity established to discern what obligations digital broadcasters have to the citizens of the United States. CBC President & CEO Jim Goodmon served on this Commission and avidly supported the five-minute suggestion. In short, the Commission requested broadcasters provide five minutes of candidate centered discourse (CCD) each evening between 5:00 and 11:30pm. The report spells out the reasoning for this request in its conclusion: "The television airwaves are owned by the American people and licensed to broadcasters for their use. In the 2000 campaign, according to the Campaign Media Analysis Group, total spending on political advertising was $771 million. Analysts at Wall Street's Paine Webber pegged the figure even higher, at $1 billion."
Capitol Broadcasting Company publicly committed to the 5/30. Only 7% of the nation's 1300 local TV stations committed to trying to meet this standard; the rest were silent on the issue. Of the 74 stations in the study, the 23 stations committed to this standard aired an average of 2 minutes 17 seconds of CCD per night. This was three times the 45 seconds of CCD aired by the non-5/30 stations. WRAL-TV aired an average of 3 minutes 38 seconds per night (only 5 stations in the country aired over 3 minutes CCD per night). WRAL is in the 29th market in the nation.
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