After the Family Viewing Hour was declared unconstitutional, the networks voluntarily continued to offer family-friendly programs such as
The Cosby Show and
Happy Days in the early prime-time hours. In 1989, Michigan housewife
Terry Rakolta started a public letter-writing campaign to persuade advertisers to stop sponsoring the
Fox network sitcom
Married... with Children after watching the episode "
Her Cups Runneth Over" with her three young children. Consequently, two companies completely withdrew sponsorship from the show, while others, including
the Coca-Cola Company, reduced sponsorship. Beginning with the 2000–2001 season,
ABC stopped showing commercials for
R-rated films during the first hour of primetime. In 2003, FCC commissioner
Kevin Martin expressed a desire to resurrect the Family Hour. In 2001, the
Parents Television Council (PTC) issued a report titled
The Sour Family Hour and campaigned for the FCC to reinstate the Family Hour on a voluntary basis. The PTC has issued numerous subsequent reports claiming that the first prime-time hour of 8:00 p.m. (7:00 p.m. in
Central and
Mountain Time Zones) has grown increasingly unsuitable for family viewing.
Bernard Goldberg and
Zell Miller have used the term "family hour" in their books to describe the early prime-time hours. The advent of
streaming television has rendered the concept of a strictly defined "family hour" difficult to enforce, given that the technology provides consumers with the ability to view adult-themed programming (including sexual content, violence and language to a degree that far exceeds that of broadcast television) at any time of the day. Of course, with modern TV and streaming services, there are filtering technologies such as parental controls and a V-chip that could "protect" children from non family friendly content, making the need for a "family hour" not relevant. ==See also==