Jason is correct, NewMexiKen should have paid closer attention to the background on the Oprah complaints at The Smoking Gun .
In the wake of an Oprah Winfrey show that included explicit talk about teen sexuality (and addressed topics such as rainbows and getting one’s salad tossed), the Federal Communications Commission received more than 1600 letters complaining about the racy March 18 broadcast and demanding that the talk show host be cited for indecency. And since most FCC correspondents were prodded to write by the agency’s Public Enemy Number One, Howard Stern, and ABC late night host Jimmy Kimmel, the Oprah complaints are particularly entertaining and vituperative in their decrying of a double standard employed by the fine-happy FCC brass. Below you’ll find a sampling of the Oprah complaints, a small chunk of the stack we received via a Freedom of Information Act request. Since the commission redacts the names of letter writers, there is no way to actually confirm the true identity of letter writers like the “parent” who, having returned home from “Bible day camp” with their three-year-old twins, had to endure Oprah’s “disgusting rhetoric.” Or the “teacher” who worried about his third grade students “viewing these vulgar conversations about sex.”