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Caption Cutback is "Major Setback"
By Leonard Hall
Under this new
declaration, the new guidelines mean the Department can
no
longer caption those programs. This
ruling meant that it will be up to the television companies or studios to
provide captioning for new programs.
Some new television shows will likely continue to be captioned.
Shows declared
inappropriate for captioning include:
·
Classic sitcoms
such as Bewitched and I Dream of Jeannie.
·
Contemporary
sitcoms such as Malcolm in the Middle and The
Simpsons.
·
Dramas such as Law &
Order.
·
Children's
cartoons such Dexter's Laboratory, Pokemon and Jimmy Neutron, Boy
Genius.
·
Many college and
professional sports programming, including basketball, baseball, auto racing, tennis,
football and golf tournaments.
With captioning, it was great to watch
football games and keep track of the information being provided to everyone. The
announcers keep the viewers interested in the event with all kinds of facts and
information.
By next fall, there may be little
captioning in most sport events. It
will be devastating to most deaf football fans, including myself, to having no
more captioning on football games.
Hearing people should try watching a
football game for a whole game without the sound on. It will drive most loyal fans crazy as
they need to hear and know everything about what is going on in the game.
Try to apply this lack of sound to other
popular television programs. A lot
of people will get angry. The
choice of television programs and shows with captioning may be limited.
Deaf advocates are saying that the
Department's new policy on captioning will move deaf and hard of hearing people
back into second-class citizenry and deny them full access to the world of
information.
NAD called the move
"censorship," saying it isolates children and
teens who are deaf or have hearing impairments and prevents them "from
watching shows that help them learn about the trends, culture and society around
them."
Lack of captioning also prevents parents
who are deaf from screening programs for their children, NAD said. For a complete list of affected programs,
visit www.nad.org
It was easy to
forget our access to captioned programs on television that began 30 years ago on
December 3,
1973, when the
first captioned ABC News was aired that night. The Department of Education announcement
is a major setback to the deaf people by not ensuring them full access to
television programs.
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