azumanga said:
quadraphonic said:
For many people, it doesn't matter if the cuss word in the show title is "uttered" or not. The intended word is clear. Just like with most other cuss words they might bleep out on shows, everyone knows what they're doing. You can't deny the intent.
In other words, you would like the FCC tighten rules even further by banning even censored cusswords. You want to make sure that the misuse of punctuation is actually a crime.
That's not near what I said. Before you jump to conclusions ask for directions man. I didn't mention the FCC. We were talking "PTC boycott" not "FCC regulation."
I'm all for discussions, lots of people don't even think it's a topic worth discussing. I maybe even could be for a boycott. I don't see the harm in any of the response to the unuttered-but-clearly-intended word. I surely wouldn't call it "laughable" for people to express their opinions about what they believe in and even put their beliefs into action, insomuch as they are able. I might not agree with their conclusions, or the way they reached them, but I can't dismiss their having an opinion on a matter.
I'm really not for the FCC to restrict much, but if that's their job, that's their job. Realistically,
someone has to restrict things. Networks should really handle that on their own, so this should've never been an issue. It should've been "My Dad Is Crazy Talking" or something. The marketplace would restrict things better anyway [he said, knowing full well that letting the marketplace speak would result in more pandering to the LCD at least initially, and thus more limited viewing choices for people who don't feel like the LCD, but he's cool with that too].
But to your point about it being a crime, if there's a rule against cussing on tv, why can't there be rules against "attempted cussing?"
We have rules against "attempted murder" and "conspiracy" for various crimes, even if "nobody really got hurt."
It's just a clever gimmick for a TV show title, which has a 99.5% chance of having absolutely nothing obscene.
Except for the title. The title is kind of important. And prominent. It will be stated pretty much every time the show is mentioned.
It's a stand-in cuss word. If you're a stand-in for a groom at a wedding, is he any less married to the bride?
Besides, the comics have always used symbolic representations of cussing, similar to the above, ever since the 19th Century -- and no one was crabbing. Let it be.
So how "clever" is it if it's been used by other people for 150 years?
People have "crabbed" about it. But there's something different between seeing symbols on a page and seeing AND hearing them in "a clever gimmick"-named tv show. Hearing them, even in abridged forms, is harder to ignore than just seeing them, and does more damage.
quadraphonic said:
For some of us, like the PTC, that even includes talking about boycotting one thing among a sea of other bad things. That's part of what "freedom" is all about.
No doubt one of the PTC's freedoms is the freedom to complain to the FCC, in order to get them to stifle the same freedoms that others enjoy -- freedom of speech and freedom of expression.[/quote]
This isn't political expression or political discourse. It's not someone expressing an idea and being arrested.
It's a title for a tv show, broadcast on tv. Restricted or not by the FCC. "Freedom of speech and expression" on broadcast tv is already restricted by the FCC, and by local authorities to prevent stampedes and riots, and other problems.
Yes, it is the PTC's right to complain, but the FCC should know better than to just listen to one group of people, especially if many of the letters are virtually the same. The FCC preactically learned the hard way a few years back with the "Saving Private Ryan" case.
If the one group of people makes a better case than the [silent] "let it be" majority, why wouldn't the FCC listen to that one group of people? Regional Court Judges do that all the time.