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Administrative Law Keyed to Glicksman
Alvin Lou Media, Inc. v. FCC
Citation:
571 F.3d 1 (2009)Facts
Alvin Lou Media, Inc. submitted an application to the Federal Communications Commission for a new broadcast license in a competitive market. The FCC denied the application, citing several technical deficiencies in the proposal, including inadequate signal coverage and potential interference with existing broadcasters. Additionally, the FCC determined that Alvin Lou Media’s programming proposal did not sufficiently address local community needs as required by the public interest standard. The FCC instead granted a license to a competing applicant whose proposal better satisfied both technical requirements and public interest considerations. Alvin Lou Media challenged this decision, arguing that the FCC had inconsistently applied its own standards and failed to adequately explain its reasoning.
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