Source:
Broadcasting & CableThe Second Circuit Court of Appeals has thrown out the FCC's fine against ABC for a shot of Charlotte Ross' bare back and behind on NYPD Blue. That means the court finds the FCC's pursuit of scripted nudity just as unjustifiable as that of fleeting profanity. Another court--the third circuit--is still pondering the FCC's pursuit of fleeting nudity (see below).
In a nonprecedential summary judgment, the Second Circuit held that since it found that the FCC's fine "for fleeting, unscripted utterances" in Fox music awards shows was unconstitutionally vague, and the NYPD Blue case, though dealing with scripted nudity, "turns on an application of the same context-based indecency test" it found impermissibly vague in Fox, the court agreed to vacate the NYPD Blue fine for the same reason of vagueness.
ABC back in August asked the court throw out the FCC's $1 million-plus fine against 52 ABC affiliates for a 2003 broadcast of NYPD Blue, citing the same court's decision a month before that the FCC's indecency enforcement regime is unconstitutionally vague.
Read more:
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/461758-Court_Throws_Out_FCC_Fine_Against_ABC_For_NYPD_Blue_.php
That episode of NYPD Blue was "Nude Awakening" from February 2003; the Parents Television Council filed most of the complaints against this episode. That season, NYPD Blue was shown at the third hour of primetime...which is before 10PM "indecency rules relaxed" time in the Central and Mountain time zones.