First Utterance of "Curse Words" on Prime-Time

Wife and I were watching Gunsmoke: Return To Dodge (1987) on DVD the other day, and stolid Newly called Steve Forrest a bastard!!!

This got us to contemplating when certain words were first used on a prime-time series, special, movie of the week, or network broadcast of a feature film.

The first character I heard use the word “ass,” other than for an animal or making one of oneself was Tyne Daly on an episode of Cagney and Lacey, probably from the late-80s/early-90s.

PBS and cable doesn’t count.

Anybody know of firsts for such words as: hell, damn, ass, bastard, son-of-a-bitch, piss, balls, etc.?

I assume the F-Bomb and the S-Bomb have not yet been uttered on the non-cable networks.

Sir Rhosis

I think “asshole” made its debut on NYPD Blue.

I heard “son of a bitch” on Maude way back in the 70s.

Didn’t Bono o U2 drop the F-bomb on an awards show on network TV? I recall the FCC intially sayint it wasn’t a violation because it was used as an adjective but later reversed it.

I remember being shocked at hearing Hawkeye say “ass” on an episode of MAS*H late in its run, probably in '82 or thereabouts.

Now that you mention it I recall the Bono incident. How about first “intentional” or scripted use of expletives.

Definitely not the first instance. Charles Rocket said “fuck” on Saturday Night Live in 1980 (and there were at least two suspected incidents also from SNL that happened earlier but the tapes are unclear).

I have always heard that Kirk saying “let’s get the hell out of here” in “City on the Edge of Forever” was the first use of the word “hell” in that context.

May Hawkeye have said it on the final 2 1/2 hour episode?

Hawkeye said “Don’t let the bastard win” in an episode of MAS*H back in the mid-70’s.

Capt. Kirk said “Let’s get the hell out of here” in the episode “City of the Edge of Forever” of Star Trek in 1967.

“Damn” was used in the Jack Webb frequent flyer Olan Soule in the infamous “Blue Boy” ep of the 1960s “Dragnet,” airing in January 1967.

^^^Way way off-topic, but it’s my thread. Soule was a great character actor, but I still can’t wrap my mind around the fact that this diminutive fella was the voice of Superman on, iirc, “Superfriends.”!

Sir Rhosis

He might have, but that’s not where I saw it; even though I adored the show, I have somehow never seen the final episode.

The remade-for TV version of On Golden Pond had a teenaged character saying, “Aw Grandpa, she’s just shittin’ you” and David Letterman gleefully played the clip over and over while his own use of the s-bomb got bleeped.

I can’t remember if it was the final episode or not but he definitely said it. The scene had to do with Korean military officers leading away someone the MASH unit was trying to hide. Hawkeye stepped up and cursed the soldiers. It sounds tame now but I remember it being really shocking at the time.

That reminds me of an earlier SNL skip where John Belushi, playing a Latino street punk complaining about school, said “All they teach you is chit…and chat…”.

I’m misremembering. In the finale, Hawkeye called Sidney a “son-of-a-bitch” for making the memory of the smothered baby resurface.

Sir Rhosis

“Tit” was used in an episode of Designing Women where Mary Jo was contemplating breast enhancement. She wore special bra-stuffers for a while to get used to the idea and her personality underwent drastic change. One of the other women (Charlene?) called her the “tit-monster.” (I guffawed.)

–Cliffy

To follow up on the MASH conversation …

Hawkeye said “Don’t let the bastard win” during an operating-room scene; he was talking to the patient on the table. I think this was the episode in which a correspondent came to do a story on the unit. The correspondent (or somebody else … whoever was the guest star in that episode) asked BJ who Hawkeye was referring to. BJ said “Death.”

Hawkeye said “son of a bitch” at least twice in the series … once, as noted above, in the finale, and once when a South Korean officer and his two guards brought in a wounded woman for treatment. They explained that she was a North Korean spy, and after she was patched up they were taking her to be tortured and questioned. Hawkeye and BJ tried to smuggle her out of the camp once she’d been operated on, but the officer anticipated them and caught them. Hawkeye called him a son of a bitch during that confrontation.

I’ve heard that, too. Certainly it was the first time I’d ever heard it used on TV.

I have a vague, unverifiable memory that Archie Bunker used the phrase “Goddamn” on All in the Family . Furthermore, when Edith expressed shock, he explained it by saying that they were two perfectly good words, used in the Bible many times.

From 1978, we have The Bastard, a mini series starring Andrew Stevens, Lorne Greene, Cameron Mitchell, and a young woman named Kim Cattrall. I wonder whatever became of her.

The first time I remember a reference to testicles was Jill Eikenberry on L.A. Law saying one of her clients didn’t have the “stones” to do something. I remember being surprised by it.

NYPD Blue routinely had characters saying “bullshit” in later seasons. One of my favorite lines from the show, speaking of profanity, was from the pilot. Sylvia says “res ipsa loquitor” to Sipowicz, who responds (while grabbing his crotch) “Ipsa dis, ya pissy little bitch!”