Then there was that time that the late Charles Rocket destroyed his nascent career on an episode of SNL by dropping an F-bomb.
That’s just bad planning on the executives’ part. The character was named Pussy Galore in the novel and that was published five years prior to the movie bring made. It’s not like EON snuck it in.
Don’t forget Marge’s alma mater, Springfield Heights Institute of Technology, or S.H.I.T.
Well, I figured mentioning South Park was too easy. Funny, thought provoking - yes. Subtle - rarely.
It’s not just the Accused by the way - they do Deliverance and also apparently Boys Don’t Cry (don’t know the specific references as I haven’t seen that one).
Seems a bit funny in hindsight:
Bart:I’m a pretty bad kid.
Cartman:Really? What’s the worst thing you’ve ever done?
Bart:I stole the head off a statue once.
Cartman:Wow, that’s pretty hardcore. Geez. That’s like this one time, when I didn’t like a kid, so I ground his parents up into chili and fed it to him.
No, they didn’t “sneak it in.” But they did head off an effort to change the name of the character.
IIRC, the tale is told in this book:
I remember the big hoopla surrounding the word “dick” being uttered in primetime. Dennis Franz had the honor during “NYPD Blue.”
I think the actual line was his referring to someone as a “dickhead.”
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Back in the '90s I remember seeing Tom Brokaw interviewing someone - can’t remember who - who was disabled through illness, maybe motor neuron disease or something, and required 24 hour care. At one point Brokaw asked him, “What about the old asswipe?”
I also remember posting this on the old usenet Straight Dope forum and someone replied, “Are you sure he wasn’t talking about Dan Rather?” Yes, I’m sure.
[del]The Simpsons[/del] South Park did it!
Rather than being an expletive, the in-universe NYPD Blue expy says “shit” in a non-vulgar synonym of “stuff” and people treat it as important.
I have noticed the recent syfy series have been trying a bit too hard tho … I remember when the red haired chick from warehouse 13 showed up on eureka and she just popped up and said " sup bitches "
The big “bitches” moment for me was Phoebe Cates in Lace, “Which one of you bitches is my mother?” I was shocked! And not Casablanca type shocked either.
Allow me to repeat myself. Tiny Toons
More from Family Guy:
PETER: Shut yer vag, Lois!
LOIS: What?!?
PETER: Nothin’.
I remember a South Park episode, not sure which one, where Cartman accused Kyle of having sand in his vagina.
I remember Larry King interviewing a bloated (and I mean “beached whale” here!) Marlon Brando on CNN shortly before he died. Every other word was “fuck” or “fuckin’”; why they didn’t bleep this, I don’t know. Maybe the interview was live, or maybe Brando was just too big a star to censor like that.
Hilariously spoofed on Mad Tv.
Are you sure about that one? I can’t see that getting past the censors in the 70’s.
I don’t think mentioning cable shows is on quite the same level as network shows. South Park only has to worry about their network’s internal policies.
Mid to late 80s is when network shows started to push the envelope. My college roommates had a running list of things you can’t say on tv that they did. One I remember from L.A. Law was when Douglas told his bailiff “I want to fondle your hooters.”
George Carlin would not be surprised that he can say he prick his finger on broadcast TV but he can’t say it the other way around.
I assure you, it did. The only reason I watched it that night was because it was a season premiere, and I knew Kate Jackson was going to show lots of skin. :o (This must have been 1977 or '78.)
As for the '80s, I remember thinking “Whoa!” when Sam told Diane during one their breakups on Cheers! “I’ll try real hard to give a damn!” Pretty strong stuff for a sitcom back then!
They upgraded from hooters in an episode where Grace quotes a defendant who said to her client “show us your tits.” Not too shabby for 30 years ago.
Then there was the one where the female news anchor claimed she was let go for having a “nicked boob” (the station manager’s words, not hers) after breast cancer surgery.