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Adult Content on Radio and TV (from Seattle Board)

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Hell, I played a spot for an escort service once and strip clubs numerous times in a top 10 market.
That escort service spot would certainly be considered illegal and a violation of the station license rules if found to be connected with prostitution. That said; just because one might get away with it, doesn't mean it isn't against the rules, or put the station license in jeopardy.
Most of the time these businesses were restricted from airing before 10 PM, but some GMs would take the cash and others turn it down. All money spends the same, it's just a question of whether you want to take it or not. If you're a rock station in some markets you're leaving a lot of cash on the table if you turn down strip club money, and the megachurch down the street isn't going to buy you, so you might as well take the buy from Babe's Cabaret.
Maybe your scuzball GM got away with it back in 1973, as Michael points out the year range, but it doesn't mean something like that would fly in a modern age of 'Me too'.
 
It depends on the state. Spent a couple weeks in eastern Colorado 5-6 years ago and did see ads for a Denver dispensary late night on KWGN-TV. It was bizarre, some guy laughing during the entire 30 second commercial. No VO…just video of their wares and a 3 second slide showing logo, address, and phone number at the ending.
Legal or not, is there a big hurry for marijuana ads on radio/TV? (Tobacco cigarette ads have been banned since the early 70s, and I haven't seen any cigar or smokeless tobacco ads in years...)
 
Legal or not, is there a big hurry for marijuana ads on radio/TV? (Tobacco cigarette ads have been banned since the early 70s, and I haven't seen any cigar or smokeless tobacco ads in years...)
Are you asking a question, or making a statement?
 
Question. Even if MJ becomes legal at the federal level, will there be an effort to ban advertising for it on broadcast radio/TV?
Various public groups of the day managed to eventually get tobacco products banned from radio and TV. Whether that happens assuming someday pot is no longer a federally controlled substance that's sold like tobacco products, remains to be seen. One could argue that pot and pot products would be similar to alcoholic beverages, which so far haven't been banned from radio or TV.
 
Maybe your scuzball GM got away with it back in 1973, as Michael points out the year range, but it doesn't mean something like that would fly in a modern age of 'Me too'.
I live in a city where the top sports talker has a sponsored "Sexy Traffic" bit where the anchor does an innuendo-laden traffic report brought to you by a strip club with a 70s era porn music bed undeneath. It's kinda terrible, and they've been doing it for 15-20 years now.

Somehow, I don't think Bonneville is going to steal that bit for Seattle.
 
I've heard radio ads for smoke shops. They don't specifically mention any tobacco products, but from the name it's obvious what they sell.
 
I've heard radio ads for smoke shops. They don't specifically mention any tobacco products, but from the name it's obvious what they sell.
Others will provide a "PSA" style ad regarding some social cause and then tag "This reminder brought to you by...." (fill in weed shop)
 
Various public groups of the day managed to eventually get tobacco products banned from radio and TV. Whether that happens assuming someday pot is no longer a federally controlled substance that's sold like tobacco products, remains to be seen. One could argue that pot and pot products would be similar to alcoholic beverages, which so far haven't been banned from radio or TV.
Wasn't TV advertising of alcoholic beverages once limited to beer or beer and wine? Ads for bourbon and such are now commonplace on TV, but IIRC, that wasn't the case a couple of decades ago, I think the same thing went for radio.
 
7th Heaven (a head shop) and Priscilla’s/Cirilla’s (adult store) advertised on some of the rock stations here in KC around 20 years ago during the day, but I don’t know if they still do.
7th Heaven had an extensive record department and sold concert tickets. The head shop part of it wasn't even half the store.
 
7th Heaven had an extensive record department and sold concert tickets. The head shop part of it wasn't even half the store.
Thanks for the info, I‘ve never been there. Usually I went to The Music Exchange or Wherehouse Music (RIP to both) and sometimes the Love Garden in Lawrence (which despite the name is a music store).
 
Thanks for the info, I‘ve never been there. Usually I went to The Music Exchange or Wherehouse Music (RIP to both) and sometimes the Love Garden in Lawrence (which despite the name is a music store).
Yep, remember that one, plus Kief's.

To make up for the dismal state of music on Kansas City radio in the early 90s (except for the short lived Planet Q on KBEQ), I bought so many CDs at Kief's and at 7th Heaven that they would save hard to get British indie pop and dance for me.

If anyone ever wants to do a shoegaze format, I'm your guy!
 
Wasn't TV advertising of alcoholic beverages once limited to beer or beer and wine? Ads for bourbon and such are now commonplace on TV, but IIRC, that wasn't the case a couple of decades ago, I think the same thing went for radio.
It did.

I remember, when moving to Reno, having to deal with some interesting lines. We could do spots for casinos, but couldn't reference gambling. We could advertise their in-house bars and mention beer and wine, but not hard liquor.
 
Wasn't TV advertising of alcoholic beverages once limited to beer or beer and wine? Ads for bourbon and such are now commonplace on TV, but IIRC, that wasn't the case a couple of decades ago, I think the same thing went for radio.
That was mostly a network standards thing; there was no FCC (or other) prohibition against it.

Also, the liquor companies themselves decided not to advertise over the air back then, it seems: Why You Couldn't See a Liquor Ad on TV For Half of the 20th Century

Same thing with (prescription) medicine ads, lawyer ads, etc.-- at first, TV stations and networks would stay away from them, but loosened up as time went on.
 
The tobacco ban was related to the surgeon general's announcement that smoking causes cancer. So far, no such dire warnings for CBD.
The first ban, effective Jan 1, 1971, only applied to cigarettes. Other tobacco products like cigars, cigarillos ("little cigars") and smokeless tobacco ("snuff") weren't banned from the air until the mid-80s.

 
Wasn't TV advertising of alcoholic beverages once limited to beer or beer and wine?
That was in the NAB Code which was determined to be a form of collusion and dropped.

I ran hard liquor ads in Puerto Rico going back to 1970: Rum, of course and some of about everything else.
Ads for bourbon and such are now commonplace on TV, but IIRC, that wasn't the case a couple of decades ago, I think the same thing went for radio.
Again, it was code. Broadcasters feared that running hard liquor would make the FCC or other entities ban all liquor ads, cutting off beer.
 
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