Monday, October 15, 2012

The creeping of TV bleeping

The art of the deleted expletive has gone mainstream, with even such prime-time fare as 'American Idol' joining a trend toward slyly censored cursing. What the [bleep] are the networks thinking?

June 12, 2011|By Melissa Maerz, Los Angeles Times
 
Reporting from New York — — Say what you want about Steven Tyler's famous lips, but it's hard to deny that they have a way with the F-bomb. During the 10th season of "American Idol," the singer dropped enough of them to blow up a small European country, and a network-censored montage that aired during the show's finale captured many of his best ones: "That was [bleep]-ing crazy good! Holy [bleep], what did I say?" "Slap that baby on the [bleep] and call me Christmas!" "Hellfire, save matches, [bleep] a duck and see what hatches!"

Getting bleeped: It's not just for awards-show speeches anymore. Once largely relegated to slips of the tongue during live events, censored cursing has evolved into a pre-planned, or at least largely expected, punch line that's network-approved and no longer lowbrow. Over the past few years, even smart network comedies such as "The Office" and "Parks and Recreation" have used bleeps to elicit laughs. And since last summer, when the FCC lost much of its power to fine networks, some writers are bleeping a blue streak.
Whether you blame it on Bono's "[bleep]-ing brilliant" outburst at the 2003 Golden Globes or chalk it up to TV scribes' freedom of speech, the use of bleeped curse words on television has risen steadily, particularly over the past few years, according to a recent study by the Parents Television Council, an L.A.-based media watchdog group. Across all networks and prime-time hours in 2010, a bleeped or muted S-word aired 95 times (up from 11 times in 2005) while a bleeped or muted F-word aired 276 times (up from 11 times in 2005). Last year, the U.S. 2nd Circuit Court of Appeals struck down the Federal Communications Commission's efforts to limit "fleeting expletives" to late-night television, a ruling that has severely hampered the government agency's ability to punish what it deems indecent language.

As a result, some contend that networks are taking full advantage of the FCC's diminished capacity and are making a concerted effort to popularize profanity on television. Critics didn't have to strain themselves to find examples in May: NBC unveiled its fall comedy "Up All Night," which finds Christina Applegate playing a new mama who swears like a mother; a very pregnant Tina Fey hosted "Saturday Night Live" and confessed in an expletive-ridden promo that, "[Bleep] yeah, I'm swearing for two these days!"; and Tyler cursed with such consistency and oddball hilarity on "Idol" he fully earned the "bleep stick" that the show's producers gleefully bestowed upon him.
"It's more than just a coincidence that, a short time after that ruling, we had '$#*! My Dad Says' coming to CBS," argues Melissa Henson, the PTC's Director of Communications and Public Education. "We have certainly have seen more explicit language since then."

Henson points out that ABC recently picked up two pilots with expletives in their titles — "Good Christian Bitches" and "The Bitch from Apartment 23." Both titles were cleaned up when they were picked up to series in May, but Henson says ABC is testing viewers' boundaries.
Granted, it's hard to tell exactly where those boundaries lie. Some believe that the FCC's indecency rules were obsolete long ago, since they reflect a world without cable or the Internet.
"There's no doubt that cable has always been less restricted, so there's more pressure on networks to do the same thing," says Paul Levinson, a professor of communication and media studies at Fordham University. "But the networks are caught, because even though the courts have slapped back the FCC, the networks' reputations are still smarting from the fines that were initially assessed to them."

Before most households had cable, many viewers were watching the same handful of television channels, which meant that the FCC effectively policed prime-time programming for a large percentage of American families. But today, the average household with a television can choose among 89 channels, according to Nielsen Media Research, which means parents have dozens of G-rated options, from Nickelodeon to the Cartoon Network.

Meanwhile, viewing habits have gotten more personal, with more viewers choosing what and when they watch instead of accidentally happening upon, say, Melissa Leo cursing her way through her Oscar acceptance speech. Regulation gets even trickier when the same shows that air on broadcast television are being watched on the Internet, which, like cable, isn't regulated by the government.

"Considering that people are getting their television in a more private way, it's less appropriate to censor it," argues Greg Daniels, creator of "The Office" and "Parks and Recreation." A few years before the FCC lost much of its power, Daniels says NBC's standards and practices department pressed him to cut a few bleeps from a heavily bleeped "P&R" episode that focused on a nickname given to Leslie's mom, "the [bleep] of Pawnee." Now, Daniels says, "If we were to cut something bleeped for broadcast, we would feel more comfortable putting it online, and that's becoming the main way that people get their entertainment."

"If we leave an episode bleeped on DVD, we're going to get [a hard time] from the 10 snotty people on the message boards," he says. "But we wouldn't have written our most offensive stuff if we knew we could air it unbleeped, because it's much funnier when it's censored."
The show's season finale featured a two-minute, excessively bleeped debate about the definition of a gay sex act. "Any time a body part got named, even if it wasn't a dirty one, we had to bleep it," he says, noting that "mouth" and "chest" were both nixed. "So it sounded like the characters were saying much worse things."
Could it be that the rise of bleeping is actually a return to traditional values? Robert Thompson, a professor of television and popular culture at Syracuse University, thinks that might be the case. He points out that it's been more than a decade since the CBS medical drama "Chicago Hope" used the first scripted S-word on prime-time network television.
At that time, he observes, "Everyone said, 'There go the floodgates. We're going to hear that word everywhere now.' But we didn't. It's 2011, and there's still surprisingly little cussing on network TV — and when there is, it's bleeped."
According to Daniels, there's a good reason for that. "Bleeping is just fun," he says. "Comedy writers are always looking for a way to get a little bit more from [standards and practices]. And this is a very good way to do that, if you're immature like us."
melissa.maerz@latimes.com

Questions:
Do you think there is too much profanity and illicit material on TV?
Is it showing viewers a new way of living?
Do you think the shows you watch have a negative effect on society?

Sunday, September 23, 2012



Bugs Bunny: The Trickster, American Style

January 6, 2008
Bugs Bunny is one of the most popular, enduring and recognizable characters in the world. His trademark smirk and his ever-present carrot were born in the late 1930s; he exploded into fame during World War II, and became an indelible part of American culture ever after.
So what makes Bugs Bugs? Well, the bunny's mercurial nature is essential to his appeal. Bugs is nice, but a bit of a bully, appealing and scary, high culture and low; he morphs from one to the other seamlessly.
As Billy West, the current voice of Bugs Bunny, puts it: "He can quote Shakespeare and then tell you where there's a barroom in Brooklyn."
'An Archetype? L'il Ol' Me?'
Bugs is a uniquely American expression of an ancient archetype — the Trickster.
"If you want to teach Folklore 101, and you need an example of a Trickster, Bugs Bunny is it," says Robert Thompson, director of a Syracuse University pop-culture studies program. "He defies authority. He goes against the rules. But he does it in a way that's often lovable, and that often results in good things for the culture at large."
Other famous tricksters: Puck in A Midsummer's Night's Dream, the Coyote in Native American mythology, the spider Anansi in West African stories, the Monkey King in Chinese culture. They're all characters who disregard every convention of their society, even of reality itself.
As Bugs himself said, about one of his own shenanigans: "I know this defies the law of gravity, but I never studied law."
Bugs Bunny gets a charge out of driving people crazy. And that may be why he lasts. He doesn't seem like a character of the '40s, but rather a character of today. His wisecracking, gender-bending, anti-authority antics broke ground long before punk rock, or David Bowie, or Jerry Seinfeld. He's impossible to pin down in any specific sense.
In fact the only way to truly describe Bugs Bunny is to simply show one of the cartoons, point at the rascally rabbit and say, "Him, in toto, not in parts. From high opera to bullfights, Shakespeare to Brooklyn, from man to woman ... he is all of those, and none."
ANSWER THE FOLLOWING QUESTIONS...
1. Do you believe lovable characters teach trickster ways?
2.  Name another famous character in history that you feel is a trickster and tell why.