Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Audio / Video
  3. Legacy Archives

CALM Act forces commercials to tone it down

Add as a preferred source on Google

CALM ActYou know that volume limbo you get caught in? The level you settle on where the show is too quiet but keeps commercials from screaming at you? Congress has decided to try and relieve viewers by passing the Commercial Advertisement Loudness Mitigation Act, or CALM Act. The bill would apply to both over-the-air broadcasters as well as satellite and cable providers.

California Representative Anna Eshoo has been a main proponent of the bill. Her own unfortunate “earsplitting experiences” with blaring advertisements made her a CALM supporter. “TV programs use a variety of sound levels to build dramatic effect. But advertisements have been neither subtle nor nuanced,” MSNBC reported she said in a House meeting Thursday. Senator Sheldon Whitehouse is a sponsor of the bill, and in September explained the need for its approval: “Every American has likely experienced the frustration of abrasively loud television commercials. While this may be an effective way for ads to grab attention, it also adds unnecessary stress to the daily lives of many Americans.”

Recommended Videos

Eshoo reports that users have been complaining to the FCC about the annoyance since 1960. The FCC has asserted that restricting advertisers falls out of its reach, and instructs consumers to utilize newer television sets that have presets to regulate volume differences or be ready to hit the “mute” button.

CALM is currently waiting for President Obama’s signature, which will require the FCC to create and enforce industry standards for commercials’ decibel levels. Advertisers will have a year to comply with the to-be-determined regulations, so keep your index finger hovering above the mute button for now.

Molly McHugh
Former Social Media/Web Editor
Before coming to Digital Trends, Molly worked as a freelance writer, occasional photographer, and general technical lackey…
Spotify’s new conversational AI can play tracks you request and answer your music questions
A ChatGPT-like AI feature is coming to Spotify for music requests and listening-history questions
spotify

Spotify is rolling out a new AI-powered conversational feature that lets Premium users talk directly to the app about what they want to hear. Users can type or speak a request and refine the results through follow-up questions instead of manually searching for a song, podcast, or audiobook.

The feature is available from Spotify’s Home and Now Playing screens and works much like a personal audio assistant. It can choose what plays, answer questions about the current track or album, recommend something new, and look through your listening history to provide more personalized responses.

Read more
Baseus Inspire XC1 review: I tested these Bose-tuned earbuds, and now I’m an open-ear convert
If you're chasing the comfort of cuff-style open earbuds without sacrificing too much in terms of audio goodness, these Baseus earbuds are a budget nirvana.
Baseus Inspire XC1 earbuds in black.

See at Amazon

Quick Review

Read more
Your dead TV may be far less broken than it looks
A technician claims a minor backlight fault can trigger a complete shutdown, leaving owners with little indication that the television could still be repaired
Computer Hardware, Electronics, Hardware

A black screen usually feels like a verdict. At that point, replacing the television can seem more sensible than paying someone to investigate what went wrong.

However, a demonstration suggests that the underlying problem in some sets could be surprisingly small. UK repair technician Allen Fleckney, who runs the YouTube channel TV Repair Community, claims one faulty light in an LCD backlight can leave the entire screen unusable.

Read more