By Ryan Sabalow, CalMatters
Even California’s governor is fed up with obnoxiously loud commercials that pop on when he’s streaming his favourite reveals.
He despatched one out saying he’d signed Senate Invoice 576.
The regulation makes streaming platforms adjust to the identical requirements as a 15-year-old federal regulation that limits how loud tv and cable broadcasters could make their commercials.
President Barack Obama signed the Industrial Commercial Loudness Mitigation (CALM) Act in 2010, which gave the Federal Communications Fee authority to subject guidelines guaranteeing that the typical quantity of TV commercials doesn’t exceed the amount of the reveals they accompany.
Streaming companies had been nonetheless nascent on the time. Members of Congress have since tried so as to add streaming platforms to the regulation, however two 2023 federal payments didn’t get hearings.
Lawmakers don’t like loud advertisements
The invoice wasn’t a tricky promote for its creator, Democratic Sen. Tom Umberg of Santa Ana. It handed the Legislature with none of California’s 120 legislators voting towards it.
Umberg instructed CalMatters this summer time that he got here up with the thought for the invoice after his legislative director, Zach Keller, instructed him about how a loud advert wakened his toddler daughter, Samantha Rose, whereas the adults had been making an attempt to loosen up and watch a present.
The measure confronted opposition from California’s influential leisure business, together with the Movement Image Affiliation of America, which has donated no less than $204,000 to lawmakers since 2015, in keeping with the CalMatters Digital Democracy database.
The opponents argued that the measure could be troublesome to implement since streaming companies don’t have the identical management over advert volumes as conventional broadcasters.
Initially Revealed: October 8, 2025 at 6:31 AM PDT