On the afternoon of October 30, 1973, radio station
WBAI in New York City, owned by the nonprofit
Pacifica Foundation, aired a program about societal attitudes toward language and included the monologue "
Seven Words You Can Never Say on Television" by comedian
George Carlin, from his 1972 album
Class Clown. The broadcast included Carlin's recitation of the words "shit", "piss", "fuck", "cunt", "cocksucker", "motherfucker", and "tits". broadcast studio warns radio broadcasters against using the
seven dirty words.|244x244pxJohn Douglas, an active member of
Morality in Media, filed a complaint with the
Federal Communications Commission (FCC) claiming that he had heard the broadcast on his car radio while driving with his young son, and that the content was inappropriate for minors per the FCC's rules on
indecency over the public
broadcast airwaves. Douglas also noted that the material should not have been broadcast during the daytime (it was approximately 2:00 pm) when minors were more likely to be listening, per the FCC's rule requiring adult-oriented programming to only be broadcast during late-night hours. The order also explained that the Carlin routine was "
patently offensive" and "deliberately broadcast" at a time when minors could have been listening, which was forbidden by the
Communications Act of 1934. Given the apparently conflicting provisions of the 1934 Act that were raised in the circuit court ruling, the FCC appealed to the
U.S. Supreme Court. The high court accepted the case in 1978 and resolved to reconcile the Act's restrictions on indecent broadcasting content with its prohibition of censorship. == Supreme Court opinion ==