Mainstream TV nudity vs babeshow nudity - Printable Version +- The UK Babe Channels Forum (https://www.babeshows.co.uk) +-- Forum: Channels (/forumdisplay.php?fid=8) +--- Forum: UK Babe Channels (/forumdisplay.php?fid=9) +---- Forum: Broadcasting Regulations (/forumdisplay.php?fid=138) +---- Thread: Mainstream TV nudity vs babeshow nudity (/showthread.php?tid=28022) Pages: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 |
RE: Mainstream TV nudity vs babeshow nudity - Krill Liberator - 05-02-2011 23:52 Nudity used for humorous effect seems to be okay, cos it's all a little bit saucy and seaside-postcardy but we all know it's just a giggle really. Tonight's edition of The Tudors wasn't funny at all though (apart from how Henry VIII still looks pretty young and fit for an ageing and incresingly ailing monarch... ho hum ), but we were treated to lots of Catherine Howard romping around topless and naked* - hurray! for those randy Tudors, huh? There was a warning, of course, so would a warning on the babeshows not suffice to cover the eventuality of any likely nudity? BTW Stan, nice clip and I can recall plenty of shows on 'old' Men & Motors (before they started showing car programmes and repeats of Minder) where the nudity was full-frontal (cos they'd 'forgotten' to edit the US video they were showing, he he he) and quite entertaining too. *Not full-frontal RE: Mainstream TV nudity vs babeshow nudity - eccles - 06-02-2011 00:24 Had high hopes for tonights TV: The Emerald Forest (BBC2) Hot Fuzz (ITV1) Kiss The Girls followed by Internal Affairs (Channel 4, where else) Sex And The City (ComedyCentralX) with The World Stands Up muh later Dirty Sanchez (Comedy Central, the channel even has Come in its name FFS) The [face] Sitter (Sky3) Pawn Stars (Bio, popular with dyspeptics) Bullseye (Challenge) Inside Me (CurrentTV) (mistake - its Inside Mexicos Drug Wars) and best of all Female Perversions on True Ent Sadly all but one were just using suggestive language to sex up unsexy shows and trick gullible people like me into watching. The other was tame woman friendly shit, or "erotica" to give it its respectable name. Oh, and Five is using its hard earned Public Service Broadcaster licence on a Saturday night for Super Casino. Ofcom were asked to relax the rules so PSBs could broadcast teleshopping and gambling on terrestrial channels. But strangely this relaxation did not extend to adult phone in shows. Im off to Channel AKA (Sky 370) which is showing XXXAKA, 18 rated music clips until 1am. Usually the same half dozen, and relatively tame, but they have a new one on right now featuring two birds in a bath and a wallaby. RE: Mainstream TV nudity vs babeshow nudity - Gold Plated Pension - 06-02-2011 03:42 (04-02-2011 15:19 )StanTheMan Wrote: I know this isn't related to the babeshows, but GOLD's policy on sex and nudity appears to be about as (il)logical as Ofcom's. When they air the episode of Porridge titled 'No Rest for the Wicked' during daytime hours, there's a scene where Fletcher is laid on his bunk reading a girlie magazine and talking to Barrowclough about conjugal rights for prisoners. Barrowclough then complains that he doesn't even get conjugal rights at home and walks out. Now in the uncut version Fletcher calls him back and says "Your need is greater than mine." before unfolding the magazine to reveal a double page poster of a topless girl. GOLD always cut this 'punchline' out, but bizarrely leave in a later scene in which Mackay is showing a group of people from the Home Office around his cell and opens Fletcher's cupboard to demonstarte that prisoners are allowed to keep photographs of loved ones, only to find the inside of the door plastered with pictures of half naked women instead. Ridiculous. All those saucy channels have slowly been removed from our screens by Ofc@m. Quote from publication. The 2005 Broadcasting Code was seen as a significant relaxation and updating of regulations when announced. However between 2005 and 2009 there has been a progressive, year-on-year clampdown on dedicated sex-themed channels by OfCom, with progressively tighter restrictions. There is no evidence that Parliament intended this when the Communications Act 2003 was passed, or that there was any widespread public appetite for tighter regulation at the time or since. Although the number of adult channels has increased, the number of operators has decreased, innovation and variety has been stifled, and many channels are now indistinguishable. Furthermore sexual content in general entertainment programmes has all but vanished. The rich tradition of mixed format entertainment (Monty Python, Kenny Everett, Benny Hill, The End of the Pier Show [1970s satire], Saturday Night with Denise van Outen, etc) has all but vanished, as sexual content for the sake of entertainment is now considered high risk. General entertainment has been bowdlerised. Ultimately the internet will be the only place to find 'sexually stimulating' material in the future. RE: Mainstream TV nudity vs babeshow nudity - Digital Dave - 06-02-2011 04:08 Which publication are you quoting from? RE: Mainstream TV nudity vs babeshow nudity - Gold Plated Pension - 06-02-2011 04:44 (06-02-2011 04:08 )Digital Dave Wrote: Which publication are you quoting from? It is the independant publication commisioned by Ofc@m that analysed the public opinion results of the 2009 survey updating the 2005 Broadcasting Code to the 2009 code. What i can't find, but will continue looking for, is the full and stated reason why Ofc@m took the precautionary approach to R18 broadcast material. All links found so far have been disabled, but it must be there, perhaps a FOI might raise it, we'll see. RE: Mainstream TV nudity vs babeshow nudity - blackjaques - 06-02-2011 08:24 (06-02-2011 03:42 )Gold Plated Pension Wrote:(04-02-2011 15:19 )StanTheMan Wrote: I know this isn't related to the babeshows, but GOLD's policy on sex and nudity appears to be about as (il)logical as Ofcom's. When they air the episode of Porridge titled 'No Rest for the Wicked' during daytime hours, there's a scene where Fletcher is laid on his bunk reading a girlie magazine and talking to Barrowclough about conjugal rights for prisoners. Barrowclough then complains that he doesn't even get conjugal rights at home and walks out. Now in the uncut version Fletcher calls him back and says "Your need is greater than mine." before unfolding the magazine to reveal a double page poster of a topless girl. GOLD always cut this 'punchline' out, but bizarrely leave in a later scene in which Mackay is showing a group of people from the Home Office around his cell and opens Fletcher's cupboard to demonstarte that prisoners are allowed to keep photographs of loved ones, only to find the inside of the door plastered with pictures of half naked women instead. Ridiculous. I strongly believe that this is Ofcon's ultimate objective. Keep up the good work, GPP. RE: Mainstream TV nudity vs babeshow nudity - StanTheMan - 06-02-2011 23:24 Just caught something on Sky Arts 2 (245) called The Beaches of Agnes (about the life of a (now) 80 year old French director)). Just as I switched on they were showing a clip from one of her films, in which a young couple with cloth sacks over their heads walk backwards and away from the camera. It soones becomes apparent that they're completely naked, but I have to confess I wasn't expecting the guy to have a full-on erection - and quite an impressive one at that. It's nearly over now (been on since 22:00) but it's repeated on Thursday at 00:00 if anyone's interested. Probably one to record, mind, so that the uncultured ones among you can fast forward through the waffle. RE: Mainstream TV nudity vs babeshow nudity - eccles - 06-02-2011 23:32 (06-02-2011 04:44 )Gold Plated Pension Wrote:(06-02-2011 04:08 )Digital Dave Wrote: Which publication are you quoting from? There was an early Content Committee decision that was finely balanced. Much of the discussion was redacted. But the published reason was that while quoted studies said R18 was not harmful, the "research" into PIN protection found that in 34% of households with multi-channel access, kids knew the PIN number, therefore Ofcom was obliged to protect children by preventing access to R18. The 34% figure seems to be misquoted by Ofcom. What was actually sid in para 3.4 of the May 2005 research was Research into the Effectiveness of PIN Protection Systems in the UK Wrote:3.4 Other PIN codes Perhaps more relevant is the preceding para 3.3 Quote:3.3 PIN awareness: PPV PIN codes At first glance this seems stunning, suggesting that hordes of kids can access PPV without their parents permission, but like most Ofcom research, this is incompetent. First it is based on kids bragging. Second where is the massive backlash from parents annoyed at £5.99 appearing on their credit cards bills time and time again for Justin Bieber and Hannah Montanna PPV concerts? Or Sky Box Office? Its EXACTLY THE SAME MECHANISM. Shrek Forever is on right now, and I am 2 clicks and a PIN away from a £3.99 bill. (Seen it. Fiona forgets who Shrek is. He rescues her.) The research does not say that parents prevent access or do not wish it. It claims 9% occasionally use it without permission, but fails to distinguish between once, getting caught, a severe telling off, then never again, and accessing adult channels once a week. RE: Mainstream TV nudity vs babeshow nudity - eccles - 06-02-2011 23:42 CONTENT COMMITTEE BOARD and the FOI A principle of Freedom of Information is that information can only be redacted while it is sensitive. It cannot be withheld forever. It would, for example, be difficult to argue that submissions by a broadcaster 6 years ago have any relation to the current commercial scene and are still commercially sensitive. Content Board Minutes can be found here: http://www.ofcom.org.uk/about/how-ofcom-is-run/content-board/minutes-and-notes-of-content-board-meetings/ but only cover the period 22/05/07 to 11/1/10. Older material has been removed and there is almost nothing from last year. By the way, one reason many links no longer work is because the Ofcom website was severely redesigned a while back. How anyone finds anything these days with stupid popup menus is a mystery. The following is interesting and might still apply: Quote:http://www.ofcom.org.uk/about/csg/ocb/content_board_notes/minutes_32nd (Path: Home > About > How Ofcom Is Run > Content Board > Minutes...) RE: Mainstream TV nudity vs babeshow nudity - Scottishbloke - 07-02-2011 00:08 It's not for Ofcom to govern what the minors in this country get up to or not. Responsibility rests solely on the parents or guardians. Ofcom don't like porn that's the problem here but they should not be allowed to pass judgement. All the necessary procedures are in place on every single sky box. If it's the freeview box's that are the stumbling block here than pure and simple Ofcom should hound the manufacturers of these box's instead of the broadcasters. All and every new box sold now must have a parental control button on it and that should be the end of it. |