Cool Quiz! Trivia, Quizzes, Puzzles, Jokes, Useless Knowledge, FUN!

 Search Cool Quiz!
 
 Advanced Search »

Trivia Quizzes Puzzles Humor Fun Pages Connect Make a Quiz!Message BoardsSend This to a Friend!View Your Profile

Entertainment Chronicals Tell a Friend!
Tell a Friend

TELEVISION OUTCRY & CENSORSHIP - Entertainment Trivia Television Outcry and Censorship

NBC affiliates in Port Arthur, Texas and Lima, Ohio decided not to broadcast a January 1996 episode of NBC's hit sitcom Friends, which showcased a lesbian wedding. The episode, which contained a highly-publicized cameo of Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich's gay sister, Candace, in the role of a minister, was determined to be "not in good taste" by the two stations.

The Emmy-winning The Rockford Files, which ran from 1974 to 1980 on NBC-TV and starred James Garner, was condemned by the National P.T.A. as one of TV's ten worst shows, due to its "excessive violence."

In October 1994, the children's action TV showMighty Morphin Power Rangers was banned by a horrified Scandinavian network after a 5-year-old Norwegian girl was brutally kicked and stoned by playmates and left to freeze to death. While Prime Minister Gro Harlem Brundtland and other national officials did not directly attribute the youngster's death to the action program, growing concern over TV violence led to the decision to ban the show in Sweden, Norway, and Denmark. The show was later reinstated once no link was found between the crime and the show. However, the Prime Minister cautioned that Norwegians should think twice before allowing free-market violence to be broadcast.

CBS, despite high viewership ratings, abruptly cancelled the weekly TV comedy show The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour in 1969. It was believed that the talented, irreverent team of Tom and Dick Smothers had challenged and satirized the network's censors one time too often. The decisive skit which prompted the cancellation was - ironically -- a televised spoof on censorship that the insubordinate twosome had deliberately concocted to irritate CBS management. It worked too well. Later, in 1973, a Los Angeles jury awarded the Smothers brothers $776,300 in damages from the network.

The Mississippi State Commission for Educational TV banned the showing of the children's educational television program, Sesame Street. With a harmonious, multi-racial neighborhood as its hub, the award-winning show was shocking and deplorable to many bigoted conservatives in the U.S. when it first aired. The state's decision to ban was reversed in 1970.

In June 1994, the sitcom Roseanne was condemned by the Media Research Center, a conservative media watchdog, as the most biased and liberal show on U.S. television. Its chairman stated that the show had "a lack of positive role models, the frequent promotion of homosexuality, and the condoning of drug use." Roseanne was one of ABC's top-ranking shows in the 1990's.

Michael Jackson's worldwide television premiere of his Black or White music video outraged thousands of home viewers with its violence and sexual innuendo. Millions of viewers watched the highly-publicized video debut when it aired in November 1991. During a 4-minute dance segment at the video's end, Jackson simulated masturbation, smashed a car with a crowbar, and grabbed his crotch repeatedly. Following the weighty criticism from parents and religious organizations, Jackson released a formal apology through his press agent, and announced that he would delete the offensive footage. The music video, which was directed by John Landis and used an extensive amount of computer graphics, cost $4 million to produce, an industry record.

In 1994, the popular pre-schooler show Barney and Friends went under attack and was boycotted by members of the Ku Klux Klan. It was revealed in the spring that Bob Joyner, the actor who donned the massive purple-and-green costume to portray beloved Barney the Dinosaur, was black. Upon learning this, KKK parents were enraged, publicly denouncing the show because they'd never been told that their small children were enamored with and being influenced by a black man.

Author: Vicki McClure Davidson

More Behind the Curtains...

Join Cool Quiz and Win Prizes!JOIN COOL QUIZ!

Login (your email)


Password (forget?)

Featured Trivia
Phobias - What are you afraid of?
What is a BOOGER made of?
Smileys and E-mail Shorthand
What do you call a group of?
Unusual
U.S. Town Names
More...

Privacy Policy | Copyright Policy | Media Kit | About Us | Make Us Your Homepage