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Feds Bans Annoyingly Loud TV Ad Volumes

"Never dreamed... what kind of chord it would strike with people."

A few years ago, an annoying ad got to the ears of Rep. Anna Eshoo, the Democratic congresswoman from California. While watching a sporting event with family members, Eshoo was jarred by a "horribly loud" commercial. Her brother-in-law suggested she do something about it. So she did--with what started as a simple, one-page legislative proposal.

The measure became one of the most popular bills she's ever sponsored.

On Tuesday, the FCC passed a set of regulations that will prevent commercials from being louder than the shows around them. It's all part of the Commercial Advertisement Loudness Mitigation (or CALM) Act, which President Obama signed into law last December. The rules go into effect a year from now. Companies that don't comply will face unspecified FCC action.

"What I never dreamed of was what kind of chord it would strike with people," Eshoo says.

"Thunderous television ads have annoyed viewers for years," reports the Associated Press. "The FCC says people have grumbled about the issue for at least a half century. But since 2002—thanks in part to all those outrageously loud car commercials, electronics ads and beer pitches--loud advertisements have been one of the top complaints the FCC receives."

Complaints grew in recent years, as ads became even louder. In the days of analog TV, louder ads took up more space on the airwaves. So broadcasters toned them down to avoid interfering with other channels. Since the conversion to digital TV broadcasts two years ago, loud ads no longer take up more airwave space than quiet ones. Some analysts claim that the change “transformed the commercial break into a noisy arms race.”

FCC Discovers TV Commercials Are Loud, Women and Children Hit Hardest

"Nobody wanted to be the quiet guy in the set of commercials," says David Unsworth, senior vice president of satellite and technical operations at DG, a company that distributes ads to broadcasters.

In a recent analysis, DG found that some ads were 10 times as loud as the programs they interrupted.

"Everybody's been trying to push the envelope using (digital) compression to make their spots as loud as they can," Unsworth says.

The FCC rules require TV distributors to set up equipment to monitor the average sound level of ads as they come in. If they're too loud, distributors must adjust the sound levels before they can be aired. It recommends practices set out in 2009 by the Advanced Television Systems Committee, a standards-setting body.

If compliance with the rules places a financial burden on a company, the FCC will give it extra time--up to December 2014--to comply. How that's supposed to help with the financial burden, we're not entirely sure.

"We think that the FCC struck the right balance," says National Association of Broadcasters spokesman Dennis Wharton.

In the months leading up to the FCC's release of the new rules, advertisers were already turning down the noise because many broadcasters are now rejecting loud ads. (Which begs the question, "Why did a new set of volume-controlling regulations have to be passed?")

Since DG began monitoring sound levels this summer, the number of ads that were considered“too loud” have fallen from about 70 percent of all ads to roughly 30 percent, Unsworth says.

Already, hundreds of TV stations, cable and satellite companies have updated equipment to comply, says Tim Carroll, founder and president of Linear Acoustic Inc., a leading maker of the equipment.

For its part, ABC and CBS say they've installed equipment at various television stations. NBC has sent specifications to its commercial suppliers and has installed equipment to reduce the volume of loud ads. Fox declined to give the AP a comment, although Unsworth says the network has been rejecting ads that are too loud and getting advertisers to fix them.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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