I don't spend a lot of time watching cable channels. I got the basic basic package when I decided an antenna wouldn't do the job in my location when TV went digital. I do have WGN America which I assumed was staying true to its history of meeting broadcast standards. When I go to the beach or the mountains I can watch other channels. Some movies get cleaned up to meet broadcast standards (or come close) and some do not. A few additional curse words the big five won't allow do make it on to those other stations even if they clean up the language.
Somewhere I got the idea that if a program goes significantly beyond what broadcast TV will allow, the rating changes from TV-14 to TV-MA. I may have used the logic that ABC, if not the others, will give a perfectly clean kids' show a TV-PG (occasionally even ABC will give a TV-G).
In fact, Hulu offered me another free month and since there were a couple of network episodes I had missed due to them getting deleted prematurely, I accepted. I have found one of the TV episodes but not the other. I did hear "Veronica Mars" got another season, on Hulu. So to make sure I took full advantage of the opportunity, I watched. A TV-14 rating. I did hear the S-word, but no big deal. This sometimes happens on movies that have been cleaned up for TV or don't require significant cleaning up. But then I heard it again and again, along with the A-word, the G-word, and some words you can use on TV but only if they don't have certain specific meanings. On this show, the words often had those specific meanings. Certain concepts that network TV doesn't talk about got discussed. In other words, a show that was once on broadcast TV got to use pretty much every word many times except the big one, and they found a funny and creative way around that. Only Veronica and her Dad used the Word but instead of using that word, they used a substitute word in every way possible. And the dirtier the use, the funnier the substitute word sounded.
After a while, it seemed like the language got cleaner. But only the frequency of use of certain words.
Over the weekend, I watched the movie "Platoon". I had avoided this highly acclaimed movie for many years. I'm glad I did. WGN America didn't even have the courtesy to put an L in the rating. D was enough? Really? Why? And TV-14 certainly wasn't. And not just because of the language. But the language was even worse than on "Veronica Mars". Oh, they bleeped the F-word and I heard just plain "Mother" a few times. And they said the C-word (no, the other one) four times. I forgot George Carlin had two C-words. By the way, George's list is down to six words, and two of them made it to network TV in rare cases before the Janet Jackson incident. One of them I think can be heard on the big five in very rare cases.
A few rare and very select uses of certain words shouldn't get a TV-MA, but I hardly think frequent use of such words is covered by TV-14.
Somewhere I got the idea that if a program goes significantly beyond what broadcast TV will allow, the rating changes from TV-14 to TV-MA. I may have used the logic that ABC, if not the others, will give a perfectly clean kids' show a TV-PG (occasionally even ABC will give a TV-G).
In fact, Hulu offered me another free month and since there were a couple of network episodes I had missed due to them getting deleted prematurely, I accepted. I have found one of the TV episodes but not the other. I did hear "Veronica Mars" got another season, on Hulu. So to make sure I took full advantage of the opportunity, I watched. A TV-14 rating. I did hear the S-word, but no big deal. This sometimes happens on movies that have been cleaned up for TV or don't require significant cleaning up. But then I heard it again and again, along with the A-word, the G-word, and some words you can use on TV but only if they don't have certain specific meanings. On this show, the words often had those specific meanings. Certain concepts that network TV doesn't talk about got discussed. In other words, a show that was once on broadcast TV got to use pretty much every word many times except the big one, and they found a funny and creative way around that. Only Veronica and her Dad used the Word but instead of using that word, they used a substitute word in every way possible. And the dirtier the use, the funnier the substitute word sounded.
After a while, it seemed like the language got cleaner. But only the frequency of use of certain words.
Over the weekend, I watched the movie "Platoon". I had avoided this highly acclaimed movie for many years. I'm glad I did. WGN America didn't even have the courtesy to put an L in the rating. D was enough? Really? Why? And TV-14 certainly wasn't. And not just because of the language. But the language was even worse than on "Veronica Mars". Oh, they bleeped the F-word and I heard just plain "Mother" a few times. And they said the C-word (no, the other one) four times. I forgot George Carlin had two C-words. By the way, George's list is down to six words, and two of them made it to network TV in rare cases before the Janet Jackson incident. One of them I think can be heard on the big five in very rare cases.
A few rare and very select uses of certain words shouldn't get a TV-MA, but I hardly think frequent use of such words is covered by TV-14.