It was left to the FCC, broadcast executives, radio program directors, record company managers, and adult opinion to decide what could or could not be used. This made the whole censorship issue ridiculously arbitrary. “Apparently there were no hard and fast rules for determining what was obscene or inappropriate. Linda Martin and Kerry Segrave, Anti-Rock: The Opposition of Rock n’Roll, Īs these topics continued to creep into the music of the generation, more and more radio stations were being threatened by the FCC. Many seem innocuous today which merely emphasizes how relative and subjective the label ‘obscene’ or ‘distasteful or ‘damaging’ can be.” It is interesting to survey a cross-section of words, phrases, or lines that were banned in the sixties and early seventies. “…Anti-war sentiment, class-consciousness, and racism were political concerns of the young, it was inevitable that these topics would be discussed in Rock and Roll lyrics…Drug use was the focus of adolescent experimentation and it was certain that drug experiences would be described in song. In regards to some of the taboo subject areas, it is mentioned that: In Anti-Rock: The Opposition of Rock n’Roll, a handful of examples are provided and I will provide a few links to some of the examples that were mentioned. These topics ranged from sexuality to violence and any songs that were considered to promote, incite, or explicitly mention these issues were often times regulated by the FCC. Furthermore, in the early 30’s, the FCC was established to help regulate publically owned bandwidth¹².ĭuring the Rock era in the early 60’s, the FCC began to ban certain songs that had to do with a range of topics that were considered indecent. The censorship of radio airwaves has a history dating back to the start of the 20th century, however, significant progress was made over control of airwaves during the late 1920’s and early 30’s as federal regulators were given the power to suspend the licenses of providers who were broadcasting obscene or profane language. In relation to radio broadcasting, this complex chain of events seems to be rooted in the ideologies that the government, the FCC, and many parents believed that Rock music represented and evoked. “Whether we do or not, more important is recognizing that acts of censorship involve a complex chain of events in which interests conflict and coalesce to create the circumstances in which bans are implemented and in which music is, as a consequence, invested with particular meanings and forms of power.” And nothings worse than bleep which has bad timing.I would like to begin this section with a quote by John Street. But going it live would mean you need second person doing it as you don't know when the right time is. Same with Twitch where you can select if your channel contains rought material. YT has setting that hides stuff which are for mature audience. Regardless of the reason or specifics on implementation and effectiveness, I'm looking for some way to bleep language before it hits the live stream. (I have other ideas for how to censor the visual content.) I know practically any content will be offensive to someone somewhere (youtube comments would attest to such a fact) but my goal is to provide a place where people would see the latest triple-A titles without concerns about language or content. But because youtube is open, people will find my streams and I would feel a lot better if I wasn't uploading content that would be offensive to them. I agree! I'm not trying to show these things to my grandmother or pre-teens.
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