F***!!!!!!!
From the Columbia Journalism Review's CJRDaily blog:
For the second time in three years, a major network looks like it might cave in to puritan activists who aim to cleanse prime time television of four-letter words. And just like last time, the youth are apparently at risk of being corrupted not by the violence of the fare in question, but by the nasty language the people on screen use in between bouts of violence.And for that unreality, those viewers can tune into ABC's 9/11 "docudrama," which is quickly morphing into a mocudrama of the facts. More later.
The documentary in question this time, 9/11, is a fairly straightforward account of the events in Lower Manhattan that day in 2001, and contains the only known video footage of the first plane strike -- shot by two French filmmakers making a documentary about New York firefighters in Lower Manhattan that morning. As you can imagine, amid the confusion and chaos, the firefighters uttered a few choice turns of phrase, and it's this bit of history that some cultural prudes want bleeped out. What's funny -- or sad, depending how you look at it -- is that the unedited documentary was previously aired twice by CBS, profanity intact and without incident, on both the six-month and one-year anniversaries of the attacks.
[...]
The current flap looks to be a carbon copy of an equally ridiculous incident in 2004, when sixty-six ABC affiliates decided not to air Steven Spielberg's WWII movie, Saving Private Ryan, on Veterans Day due to worries that the film might be deemed indecent -- even though the FCC in 2002 had already ruled that it was not. ABC, too, had previously broadcast the film uncut in 2001 and 2002.
[...]
The greatest irony is that the FCC long ago said that it would not fine ABC affiliates that showed Saving Private Ryan because its profanity is shown in the context of a war. This logic seems to have eluded the CBS affiliates who are choosing to censor the honest reactions of a group of firefighters to the murder of more than 2,000 fellow Americans, in favor of currying favor with a vast minority who don't seem to want too much reality to seep into their recollections of that day.
4 Comments:
To quote Hugh Grant from Four Weddings and a Funeral: "Fuck it! Fuck! Fuck. Fuck. Fuck. Fuckity fuck! Bugger."
Oh sure, way to kick me into total fangirl mode by randomly quoting Hugh Grant. Ah, "Four Weddings...."
A movie so charming not even bland Andie McDowell could ruin it. Hugh, baby....call me!
On a similar note, I'm watching Bravo's "Inside the Actors Studio" not too long ago for a fix on my other favorite Hugh (Laurie) and one of the regular questions is "what's your favorite swear word?" The answer was "fuck" and "all it's fucking cognates." Or rather, I assume that was the answer, being that it was bleeped out and all. To which I have to wonder: what is the freaking point? Cable channels buckling down to not airing profanity? And that being the case, maybe James Lipton should just ask another question entirely? One that doesn't make me guess at the answer? Argh.
I thought that might reel you in. I love saying the word "fuck" (and all its fucking cognates) -- I'd like to blame it on my Scottish heritage. However, I'm going to have to retrain myself in the near future as we welcome some changes to Cracks Centraal...
oooh, ooh, ooh....can I guess? can I guess? oh, never mind...I'll wait for the announcement.
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