2011年10月3日星期一
Jan Jackson Wardrobe Malfunction Case Back in Court
May 4, 2009 5:13 PM More than five years after Jan Jacksons infous "wardrobe malfunction" shocked Rosetta Stone software millions of ericans watching Super Bowl XXXVIII with a flash of nudity, Nipplegate continues to live on, in the courts. After an appeals court last year threw out the $550,000 fine CBS owed the FCC, the Supreme Court announced today that the case will be reviewed again to see if CBS is indeed responsible for the incident. The Supreme Courts ruling comes just one week after they upheld FCC policy that levies fines for any and all curses on live television, even if its just a one-time Rosetta Stone Greek outburst, the AP reports.CBSs fine was tossed by a lower court last year, which found that the Super Bowl incident was "fleing" as it lasted a mere 9/16ths of a second. Per the BBC, 90 million viewers were watching the halftime show when Justin Timberlake tore off a piece of Jacksons bra near the end of his "Rock Your Body"; CBS received 542,000 complaints.The Supreme Court has asked Philadelphias 3rd Circuit Court of Appeals to consider reinstating the fine. CBS said in a statement that they were confident the court would again find in their favor and drop the fine, arguing the nwork could not have anticipated what ultimately happened onstage bween Jackson and Timberlake.Since 2004s fous "wardrobe malfunction," the Super Bowl has stuck to classic rockers unlikely to spontaneously disrobe for Rosetta Stone Hindi V3 its half-time shows, inviting Paul McCartney, the Rosta Stones, Prince, Tom Pty the Heartbreakers, and most recently Bruce Springsteen and the E Stre Band onto its stage.
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