I know that cable channels aren't subject to regulations but this has been my experience.
I don't have anything at home except the channels once available with an antenna during the analog era, WGN America, an all-news channel and a couple of others. Anything else would be too expensive and I wouldn't have time to watch everything anyway. I'm not confident even an outdoor antenna would work consistently in my location partly due to trees but also because of distance and other problems that would cause interference.
So when I go to a motel like I did last week, I watch movies on FX, TNT and other channels. I just look in my newspaper TV section and see what's on that I haven't seen (some listings were not accurate and I ended up just searching through channels and found one with an autistic youngster, and since the movie aired again after it finished up, I saw what I had missed) . A lot of these movies have never been on network TV even cleaned up.
And in the past even FX has generally shown versions of movies that meet broadcast standards or come close, with a TV-14 rating. FX generally allows the A-word and the G-word and a couple of others. Whatever channel I was watching Friday night also had the S-word a number of times but still had a TV-14 rating. There may have been times when I didn't hear anything when a word that was worse was used.
I saw "Wolf of Wall Street" some years ago and I think the F-word was left out of it but everything else was left in, with warnings about language after very commercial break. I also believe the rating was TV-MA.
I can't even recall a movie on a cable channel which allowed the F-word and even if it stopped short of the F-word we were warned about language after every commercial break.
So I saw a movie on SyFy with a TV-MA rating. No warning at all. How many times did Samuel L. Jackson use the F-word and the MF-word? More times than I could count. And two other characters were almost as bad. Given past practices, I would think people would have certain expectations and would be shocked at what they were hearing. And what was this movie even doing on SyFy? There wasn't anything about it that was science fiction.
I don't have anything at home except the channels once available with an antenna during the analog era, WGN America, an all-news channel and a couple of others. Anything else would be too expensive and I wouldn't have time to watch everything anyway. I'm not confident even an outdoor antenna would work consistently in my location partly due to trees but also because of distance and other problems that would cause interference.
So when I go to a motel like I did last week, I watch movies on FX, TNT and other channels. I just look in my newspaper TV section and see what's on that I haven't seen (some listings were not accurate and I ended up just searching through channels and found one with an autistic youngster, and since the movie aired again after it finished up, I saw what I had missed) . A lot of these movies have never been on network TV even cleaned up.
And in the past even FX has generally shown versions of movies that meet broadcast standards or come close, with a TV-14 rating. FX generally allows the A-word and the G-word and a couple of others. Whatever channel I was watching Friday night also had the S-word a number of times but still had a TV-14 rating. There may have been times when I didn't hear anything when a word that was worse was used.
I saw "Wolf of Wall Street" some years ago and I think the F-word was left out of it but everything else was left in, with warnings about language after very commercial break. I also believe the rating was TV-MA.
I can't even recall a movie on a cable channel which allowed the F-word and even if it stopped short of the F-word we were warned about language after every commercial break.
So I saw a movie on SyFy with a TV-MA rating. No warning at all. How many times did Samuel L. Jackson use the F-word and the MF-word? More times than I could count. And two other characters were almost as bad. Given past practices, I would think people would have certain expectations and would be shocked at what they were hearing. And what was this movie even doing on SyFy? There wasn't anything about it that was science fiction.