> > Considering that Canadian broadcasting rules aren't as
> > restrictive as the FCC's, more stations in the Great White
>
> > North take chances and push the envelope.
>
> Canadians don't pander to a minority of special interest
> groups that lose their mind everytime there is a positive
> portrayal of some group they don't like or a hint of sexual
> content.
>
> A larger percentage of the country goes hypocritical over
> things like the wardrobe malfunction that was the equivalent
> of Adriane Barbeau showing a nipple in the movie The Fog.
> Only if you paused your Tivo and went looking (as the
> largest percentage of Tivo owners ever did with their boxes)
> could you barely make it out. The outrage! Wait, let me
> roll it back... darn overshot it. Call the FCC!!! OK, hit
> pause now. Write your Congressman!!! Yeah, wait, there is
> something that could be a nipple there... try and move it
> ahead one more frame. I can't believe they would air this
> on TV... my children will be scarred for life because they
> almost saw the nipple that I was trying to see by running
> the Tivo forward and back!!!
>
> At the same time, little Dylan and Ashley can stay in the
> room for The Shield.
>
> South Park has been seen by virtually every kid with cable
> in the country, whether their parents know it or not.
>
I was 10 when I first saw it. And that was in 1997. It became EXTREMELY popular not long after.
Personally, I think South Park should be rated "TV 14" instead of "TV MA" on cable. There is a lot worse out there and from the looks of it the core audience is between the ages of 14 and 17
I would guess the new "Cleaned Up for broadcast TV" airings will be TV-PG or TV-14.
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