RE: Mainstream TV nudity vs babeshow nudity
This thread is about mainstream TV being treated more leniently than babeshows when the rules and surveys say otherwise, but at this time of year it is interesting to pause for a minute and reflect on the restrictions ordinary TV is working under.
At various times through 2014 well respected TV and film personalities have complained about the current system. I cant claim to have documented every comment but here are a few.
Ronnie Corbett said he did not think The Two Ronnies could be made in the current climate. I am not sure exactly what he was referring to. The smutty inuendos delivered with sweet innocence perhaps. The occasional leggy dancer or glimpse of cleavage that was not strictly called for by the script. The near vocalisation of swearwords (weather at Lissindown, Dr Spooner referring to a womans cunning stunt).
Danny Baker said TV used to be about entertainment, now it is about lawyers. He gave an example of a light hearted item on a local news show where residents of a London borough whose symbol is a gryphon were filmed pointing and giving directions. They had been asked the way to somewhere but in the broadcast article it looked as if they were asked if they had seen they gryphon and where. Apparently this breaks rules about misrepresentation.
I dont care if Ofcom say they got it wrong, if that is what broadcasters of the calibre and experience think then there is something seriously wrong.
Older readers may recall a news story from the 80s when a head teacher in a particularly notorious left wing London borough announced that henceforth a popular nursery rhyme would be Baa Baa Green Sheep so as not to be offensive. Eventually serious council leadership announced that the ban had nothing to do with them and there was no boroughwide ban on the, ahem, more traditional wording. Nevertheless, they had created a climate where experienced professionals below them thought it was.
Censorship becomes particularly dangerous when it spills over to self censorship. A vast amount of material that would be permissible, and borderline material, simply ceases to be created, effectively lowering the bar well below the threshold. Its as if the effect of a 30 mile an hour speed limit were that most drivers reduced their speed to 25 to be on the safe side. The authorities then take much more notice of content that is borderline, on the boundary, or slightly over, when beforehand under "normal" conditions it would not merit a second glance, and enforcement would focus on serious breaches, people doing 50 in a 30 zone.
Remember Benny Hill? I doubt that could be broadcast even after 9 these days. OK, it was male orientated and must have been uncomfortable viewing for women, but that is not the point (or covered by Ofcom rules).
OK, what about Kenny Everett and Hot Gossip? Plenty there for the wife/gran to drool over with oiled up male dancers in skimpy shorts, so gender imbalance does not arise as an argument. The dancers knew full well they were putting on an erotic performance (unlike Hills Angels) and the audience knew what to expect (unlike the Benny Hill Show which claimed to be family entertainment). The icing on the cake was that Kenny could not be accused of being a dirty old man either. The public might not have known he was gay but I bet the IBA and press did.
Assorted comedy shows threw in random hot sketches, mainly to spice things up. Technically they could have been cut or filmed differently, making them unsuitable under current rules.
Up Pompeii - which I think ran for several seasons - did not feature nudity or toplessness. But there were plenty of good looking young women in short togas showing plenty of leg and cleavage. And before you ask, no, that was not even remotely historically accurate, ordinary Romans kept their women well wrapped up. The film on the other hand had plenty of bare flesh, male and female, and may have been made with half an eye on TV broadcast after the 2 year theatrical release period. It was made by the BBC or with BBC blessing. As a film the BBC could claim it was not responsible for the nude scenes and it would be a breach of artistic integrity to edit them out, an argument it would find difficult for an in house TV production subject to prefilming script control.
Those shows were not isolated incidents or short lived maverick flashes in the pan, they were long running well established popular shows with large audiences.
And could not be made today.
Gone fishing
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