IIRC, Carter’s comment was directed at Ted Kennedy, who was challenging Carter for the nomination, and Carter declared he would whip his ass. The comment was not on TV, but was reported. It got lots of play from Carson and others, though.
Another, similar incident in the 1984 campaign involved a quote of VP George H. W. Bush, who expressed the opinion that he had “kicked ass” in a debate against Democratic VP candidate Geraldine Ferraro. Critics claimed it was sexist.
Didn’t the Jessica Biel character on 7th Heaven call her Dad a goat-felching cuntwaffle when her character was kicked out of the house? Or did I just imagine that?
Couple of questions: 1. When does “prime time” officially end in the US? 8:30pm? You don’t hear much swearing here in Australia before 8:30 at night, but after that, it’s pretty much a free-for-all. Shows with foul words have a warning at the beginning, but aside from that anything goes, except “cunt” which I have only heard once or twice on free-to-air. 2. How about your newspapers? Words like “shit”, “bullshit”, and “arse” appear uncensored in the Sydney Morning Herald (a respectable top-shelf broadsheet), providing they are in context (qoutes etc).
One famous local example of accidental swearing was in the early 80s on daytime television. There was some awful movie or other for the housewives, blue rinse set, and old dears to watch in the afternoon, and it was being plugged by the hostess of a morning TV show (Barbie Rogers, I think). As they cut to a commercial break, she recommended the viewers should watch the movie, and then mistakenly thinking she was already off air, added “if you don’t, I’ll rip your bloody tits off!”
In the U.S., “prime time” for the networks usually starts at 8 p.m. and ends at 11 p.m. from Monday to Saturday. On Sunday, prime time goes from 7 p.m. to 11 p.m. These, by the way, are the times for the Eastern and Pacific time zones. In the Central and Mountain time zones, everything starts and ends an hour earlier.
Also, that latter story you mention reminds me a lot of the legendary “Uncle Don” incident from radio.
Prime time in the U.s. runs from 7:30-11:00 p.m. on the East and West Coasts, and 6:30-10:00 p.m. in the Midwest.
Only under exceedingly rare circumstances.
Daytime TV has traditionally been more adventurous than nighttime TV, at least in terms of subject matter. U.S. daytime dramas (“soap operas”) dealt with topics like illegitimate pregnancy, abortion, rape and homosexuality several years before they were even mentioned on prime time. However, language is usually kept somewhat clean.
Simply count the number of bleeps you hear on an episode of “The Jerry Springer Show.”
It must have been the very early '80s: Murray left the cast at the end of the 1979-80 season. BTW, while I’ve heard of the Paul Shaffer and Charles Rocket usages, I’ve never heard of Murray saying it on SNL.
Aaaaah okay. I think the Australian version (and I’m not too sure of this) is regarded to be 6:00pm (traditional evening news slot) until 8:30pm. After 8:30, the number of viewers tuned in remains high, but the censorship laws change, and that’s when you can let fly with a ‘fuck’ or two, but it’s regarded technically as a different category to prime time. The laws regarding such things as the advertising of alcohol also loosen up at 8:30pm, when the kiddies are supposed to be in bed (but usually aren’t).
That’s a good point. Quite obvious now that I think about it, though you tend to imagine daytime TV as being for little old ladies, but it does have some dodgy stuff - last time I saw Springer there was a near-naked obese man “going back to the womb” in a baby’s wading pool full of some sort of goo. That sort of thing would have been talked about a lot the next day had it been on one of the high-rating evening shows.
Was there really an old childrens’ TV host who, at the end of the show and thinking his mike was off, said “That’ll keep the little bastards happy for a while.”?
Brits seem to be rather more tolerant of rude words on their TVs than Americans.
Nevertheless, there is a “watershed” for terrestrial TV over here: before 21.00 it is assumed that kiddies may be watching so broadcasters are supposed to keep away from rude words and nudity until 21.01 when they may bombard us with as much filth as we can stomach. For subscription channels the watershed is 20.00.
The first utterance of “fuck” on British TV happened as long ago as 1965, by critic Kenneth Tynan on a late-night discussion programme ironically on the subject of censorship.
Of course, you could always hear a great many unscripted swear words on televised football matches - it’s difficult to drown out 20,000 voices chanting “The referee’s a Bastard”.
It’s still quite rare to hear the word “cunt” on British TV (although many viewers tend to use it out loud whenever Gyles Brandreth appears on their screens …). The earliest scripted one that I can remember was in the 1989 mini-series “Mosley” but I am sure I’d heard one before that.
Recently, there was a bit of a hoo-ha about the screening by the BBC of “Jerry Springer, The Opera” which included a large number of rude words - 8,000 of them, apparently - and potentially blasphemous stuff too, I understand. Some 55,000 idiots complained even before it was shown, with 8,000 more complaints after.
Someone mentioned newspapers, but newspapers aren’t legally in the same realm as TV when it comes to censorship. TV and radio are censored by the FCC, which can impose fines for ‘indecent’ behavior if it recieves complaints. It is theoretically possible to say ‘fuck’ on prime-time programming and get away with it if nobody calls in to bitch, but given that some organizations actually hire people to monitor TV for such things it would be extremely rare. (More than 99% of all FCC complaints come from one group. I’ll provide cites later if nobody else does.)
Newspapers, needless to say, are bound by no such restrictions. A paper could print Naked Lunch completely unedited if the licensing issues were hammered out. The only restrictions on newspapers are obscenity laws, which don’t actually restrict very much at all, and their own self-censorship born out of the normal corporate risk-aversion.
I could be completely wrong but I don’t think I am. True ‘prior restraint’ censorship is very rare in this country, usually limited to National Security Reasons, and the tricks played by bodies like the FCC are also rare.
A correction to what kunilou wrote: Prime Time runs from 8:00 (not 7:30) to 11:00 p.m. on the East Coast and West Coast; in the Central and Mountain time zones it runs from 7:00 to 10:00 p.m. Prime Time is network programming.
The Federal Communications Commission (FCC), which regulates broadcasting in the U.S., allows any language between 10 p.m. and 6 a.m.
Cable TV does not come under the FCC purvue, and can use whatever language it wants at any hour.
Not a swear, but I remember reading that I Love Lucy was the first show to use the word “pregnant.” There were pregnant characters on TV before, but the word was verboten.