Shows or music videos edited or removed for controversy
Censorship on MTV
has been the subject of debate for years.
MTV
, the first and most popular
music television
network in the U.S., has come under criticism for alleged censorship in their programming. Throughout the decades, MTV has altered or removed shows from the channel's schedule to address complaints; and music videos have been censored, moved to late-night rotation, or banned from the channel's rotation for various types of controversial content.
Censorship in full-length programming
[
edit
]
The hit show
Jackass
was subject to frequent censorship in the early 2000s. The popularity of the show, combined with the propensity of young viewers to attempt to imitate the show's risky stunts, led to substantial
controversy
. Although the show featured prominent warning messages at its start, end, and upon return from all commercial breaks urging viewers not to re-create any stunts seen on the program, nor submit footage to the network of those stunts for casting consideration on that or other MTV series, the show was nonetheless blamed for many injuries. In 2001, then-Senator
Joe Lieberman
urged Viacom to take more responsibility for the program's content;
[1]
which led MTV to only air the show after 10
p.m. The creators of
Jackass
expressed frustration over the restraints that MTV's producers imposed on stunts after Lieberman's statement. These limitations eventually led to the departure of several cast members, and to the conclusion of the show.
[2]
MTV's influence also affected its famous animated program,
Beavis and Butt-Head
. In the wake of a controversy that followed a child burning down his house after allegedly watching the show, producers moved the show from its original 7
p.m. time slot to a late-night, 11
p.m. slot. Beavis' tendency to flick a lighter and chant the word "
fire
" was removed from new episodes, and controversial scenes were removed from existing episodes before rebroadcast.
[3]
Some of the edits were so extensive that when series creator
Mike Judge
compiled his
Collection DVDs
he commented that "some of those episodes may not even exist actually in their original form".
[4]
The
Parents Television Council
has argued that much of the censored material on MTV is easily discernible because of the context in which it is presented.
[5]
[6]
Censorship of music videos
[
edit
]
MTV has frequently edited music videos to remove lyrical references to
alcohol
,
tobacco
,
drugs
,
[7]
sex
,
nudity
,
violence
,
weapons
,
homophobia
,
ableism
,
suicide
,
religion
or
advertising
, and completely edits out swear words.
[8]
Usually, all
racial slurs
are censored on MTV music videos
[9]
and programming,
[10]
and MTV has emphasized racial tolerance for people of all races and creeds.
[11]
Examples of lyric edits have included:
- In the song "
Beautiful Girls
" by
Sean Kingston
, the word "suicidal" in the chorus was altered to "in denial".
[12]
- In
Michael Jackson
's single "
They Don't Care About Us
", MTV has replaced the words "Jew me" and "
kike
me" with "do me" and "strike me" in the line "Jew me, sue me, everybody do me / Kick me, kike me, don't you black or white me."
[13]
[14]
Jackson later explained that the song used the words to describe prejudice and that it was poor judgment to select Jewish people as explanatory words.
[15]
- "
This Love
" by
Maroon 5
had the words "coming" and "sinking" muted out due to possible sexual connotations.
[16]
- "
Pumped Up Kicks
" by
Foster the People
was edited to remove references to the song's subject daring people to "outrun my gun" and to run "faster than my bullet".
[17]
Videos moved to late-night or obscure rotation
[
edit
]
In attempt to address criticism over risque content, MTV has sometimes moved certain videos to late-night rotation in censored format.
Sexual content
[
edit
]
- "
If I Could Turn Back Time
" by
Cher
was pushed to hours after 9
p.m. due to the singer's revealing clothing.
[18]
- "
Baby Got Back
" by
Sir Mix-a-Lot
was aired only after 9
p.m., due to its depictions of women's bodies. (The station had recently instated a policy against showing female body parts with no reference to a face.)
[18]
[19]
- "
Closer
" by American industrial rock band
Nine Inch Nails
was heavily censored when aired on MTV due to sexually explicit imagery that contained a nude bald woman wearing a crucifix mask, NIN frontman
Trent Reznor
in bondage, and an image of a vulva, along with the song's notorious lyric "I wanna fuck you like an animal." The objectionable content was replaced with a picture that said "scene missing".
- The song "
Etienne
" by
Guesch Patti
was moved to late-night rotation in
MTV Europe
in 1987 due to a striptease scene.
[20]
- In February 2004, following the
controversial Super Bowl XXXVIII halftime show
in which performer
Justin Timberlake
exposed the breast of co-performer
Janet Jackson
, MTV made several efforts to limit daytime rotation of music videos that could be perceived to have too much sexual content. Such videos included:
Misogyny
[
edit
]
Political content
[
edit
]
Foreign edits
[
edit
]
- "
Turn Me On
" by
Riton
and
Oliver Heldens
featuring
Vula
- all shots where some doctors try to cut out a man's heart, along with the close-up of the man were replaced by completely different scenes due to violence.
- This edit was made on MTV's sister channel
MTV Hits
.
Banned music videos
[
edit
]
From MTV in the United States
[
edit
]
Several videos have been perceived as too controversial to play on MTV even in censored form, for varying reasons. In the 1980s, parent-media watchdog groups such as the
PMRC
criticized MTV over certain music videos that were claimed to have explicit imagery of
Satanism
. MTV has developed a strict policy refusing to air videos that may depict devil worship or anti-religious bigotry.
[18]
- "
American Life
" (
Madonna
) – pulled by the artist and replaced with a second version
[29]
- "
Arise
" (
Sepultura
) – banned for apocalyptic religious imagery, including crucified figures wearing gas masks
[30]
- "
A Tout Le Monde
" (
Megadeth
) - banned for alleged suicide lyrics
- "
Be Chrool to Your Scuel
" (
Twisted Sister
) – banned for showing zombies in a school engaging in suggestive acts
[31]
- "
Body Language
" (
Queen
) – banned due to erotic and homoerotic content
[32]
- "
Bombs
" (
Faithless
) ? banned over use of violent imagery to convey an anti-war message
[33]
- "California" (
Wax
) ? banned due to its depiction of a stunt involving a man on fire
- "
Closer
" (
Nine Inch Nails
) - banned for depiction of nudity, S&M bondage, a live monkey being strapped to a crucifix, and sexually charged lyrics. An edited version was also made to censor some of the explicit content.
- "
Erotica
" (Madonna) – banned from the MTV music channel but later seen in the
Beavis and Butt-Head
episode "Door to Door"
[34]
- "
Ghost Ride It
" (
Mistah F.A.B.
) ? banned due to allegations of encouraging dangerous driving behavior; as well as copyright complaints about the car used in the video
[35]
- "
Happiness in Slavery
" (Nine Inch Nails) - banned for nudity, simulated gore, and unsimulated sexual torture by performance artist
Bob Flanagan
- "
Hurricane
" (
Thirty Seconds to Mars
) – banned for containing sexually explicit scenes and violent imagery
[36]
- "
In My Darkest Hour
" (Megadeth) – banned for alleged suicide references
[37]
- "
I Want to Break Free
" (
Queen
) – banned for depicting crossdressing and tran-sexuality.
- "
Jesus Christ Pose
" (
Soundgarden
) – banned for depicting a blindfolded girl and a mechanical skeleton on a cross, followed by several crosses that flashed repeatedly from upright to inverted positions
[38]
- "
Justify My Love
" (Madonna) – banned for containing explicit imagery of sadomasochism, voyeurism, and bisexuality
[39]
- "
Lacquer Head
" (
Primus
) – banned for lyrics describing minors using drugs; the music video also featured a child watching TV while a devilish creature administers gasoline to the child, who then explodes into a frenzy (with the creature riding on him) and ultimately crashing into a wall, burning to ashes
[40]
- "
Quote Unquote
" (
Mr. Bungle
) - banned due to creepy imagery and several characters being hanged.
- "Reckoning Day" (Megadeth) ? allegedly banned due to management conflicts
[41]
- "
s(AINT)
" (
Marilyn Manson
) - banned for explicit depictions of sex, drug use, and self-inflicted violence.
- "Six, Six, Six" (
DeGarmo and Key
) ? pulled due to images of an Anti-Christ engulfed in flames; later re-added to rotation in an edited form
[42]
[43]
- "
Sunshowers
" (
M.I.A.
) ? banned for objectionable lyrics
[44]
- "
The Creature from the Black Leather Lagoon
" (
The Cramps
) - banned for erotic content
- "The Price of Beauty" (
Suicide Silence
) ? banned for gore
[45]
- "Tormented Mind" (Burning Human) ? banned for violence
[46]
- "
Try That in a Small Town
" (
Jason Aldean
) = banned for criticisms of selected organisations.
[47]
- "
What It Feels Like for a Girl
" (Madonna) ? banned for violent content throughout
[39]
From MTV in the United Kingdom
[
edit
]
- "
My Favourite Game
" by
The Cardigans
? filmed with five different endings; most of which were banned on MTV UK due to fears that the video could encourage joyriding and cause car accidents.
[48]
The two least-violent endings were eventually selected for MTV UK rotation.
See also
[
edit
]
References
[
edit
]
- ^
"Senator Joe Lieberman: News Release"
. 2009-01-12. Archived from
the original
on 2009-01-12
. Retrieved
2017-07-31
.
- ^
"Jackass: An Oral History"
.
Maxim
. Retrieved
2017-07-31
.
- ^
Censorship & Scandals: Beavis & Butt-head
Archived
2012-11-19 at
Archive-It
- ^
Mike Judge
(2005).
Beavis and Butt-head: The Mike Judge Collection Volume 1
Taint to Greatness the Journey of Beavis and Butt-head (Part 1)
(
DVD
).
- ^
"I Want My Foul TV"
(Press release).
Parents Television Council
. 2005-08-11. Archived from
the original
on June 14, 2006.
- ^
Kuhn, Katherine (2007-09-07).
"So You Think You Can Rate a TV Show? - "The Hills"
"
. Parents Television Council. Archived from
the original
on 2007-10-03
. Retrieved
2007-09-14
.
- ^
Williams 2005
, p. 8 In this case, a reference to
crack cocaine
was removed from the video for "
My Band
" by
D12
.
- ^
Nuzum 2001
, pp. 91?92
- ^
Williams 2005
, pp. 6, 8 The report mentioned that "
nigga
" was censored out of the videos "
Freak-a-Leek
" by
Petey Pablo
(p. 6) and "
My Band
" by
D12
. (p. 8).
- ^
Making the Band 2 Episode Summaries
Archived
February 3, 2008, at the
Wayback Machine
- ^
MTV.com - think - Discrimination -> Racism
Archived
September 13, 2007, at the
Wayback Machine
- ^
Group, Vibe Media (November 2007).
"20 Questions"
.
Vibe
. p. 144.
- ^
Weinraub, Bernard (June 15, 1995).
"In New Lyrics, Jackson Uses Slurs"
.
The New York Times
. Retrieved
December 12,
2008
.
- ^
"They Don't Care About Us original lyrics"
. Archived from
the original
on March 4, 2016.
- ^
"ADL Welcomes Michael Jackson's Decision to Remove Anti-Semitic Lyrics from Song"
(Press release). Anti-Defamation League. 1995-06-22. Archived from
the original
on 2012-05-06
. Retrieved
2007-06-23
.
- ^
Williams 2005
, p. 7
- ^
Richard Huff (28 June 2011).
"MTVU censors Foster the People's music video hit 'Pumped Up Kicks'
"
.
NY Daily News
. Archived from
the original
on June 14, 2012.
- ^
a
b
c
MTV
- ^
"
'And I Cannot Lie': The Oral History of Sir Mix-a-Lot's 'Baby Got Back' Video"
.
Vulture
. 2013-12-19
. Retrieved
2017-07-31
.
- ^
"La Discotheque du 20e siecle", 1988, Polygram Direct, p. 14
- ^
"Prodigy Video To Air On MTV As Controversy Continues"
. MTV News. 1997-12-04. Archived from
the original
on August 22, 2001
. Retrieved
2008-09-01
.
- ^
"MTV Explains Decision To Pull Prodigy"
. MTV News. December 22, 1997. Archived from
the original
on September 20, 2003
. Retrieved
September 1,
2008
.
- ^
"
'Bitch' banned from MTV"
. Yahoo Music. December 23, 1997. Archived from
the original
on August 29, 2012.
- ^
"MTV's Most Controversial Videos"
. MTV. Archived from
the original
on August 14, 2003.
- ^
Serpick, Evan (November 5, 2002).
"Play It Again; Is MTV getting too gross?"
.
Entertainment Weekly
. Archived from
the original
on December 2, 2002
. Retrieved
May 30,
2010
.
- ^
"Chuck D Speaks About MTV and Fighting the Power"
.
BET
. September 27, 2002. Archived from
the original
on August 5, 2004.
- ^
Cave, Damien (February 23, 2004).
"MTV Under Attack by FCC"
.
Rolling Stone
.
- ^
Rotter, Jeffrey (May 9, 2004).
"Jay-Z Wants to Kill Himself"
.
The New York Times
. Archived from
the original
on July 13, 2014.
- ^
McLernon, Matt (2003-03-31).
"MTV hurts war effort with censorship"
.
DailyOrange.com
. The Daily Orange. Archived from
the original
on 2007-07-16
. Retrieved
2007-05-28
.
- ^
Rivadavia, Eduardo.
"
"Arise" - Overview"
.
Allmusic
. Retrieved
2007-08-03
.
- ^
Prato, Greg.
"Come Out and Play" review
.
Allmusic
: 1999
- ^
Nuzum 2001
, p. 95
- ^
Corporate censorship: Excluded from MTV
Archived
2016-08-07 at the
Wayback Machine
- ^
Kulkarni, Dhananjay.
Madonna - Controversies continued...
Archived
2011-09-19 at the
Wayback Machine
Buzzle.com: May 14, 2004
- ^
Liu, Marian (2007-05-14).
"Mistah F.A.B. walks the walk"
.
San Jose Mercury News
. Retrieved
2007-05-26
.
MTV asked for edit after edit on the video, and eventually banned it. Columbia Pictures, which owns the "Ghostbusters" franchise, demanded the video be pulled because it still owned the rights to the likeness of the "Ghostbusters" car and logo, which were altered but used in the video.
- ^
Vick, Megan (November 30, 2010).
"30 Seconds To Mars Video Banned By MTV"
.
The Hollywood Reporter
. Retrieved
March 28,
2014
.
- ^
"The Realms of Deth - Megadeth Videography - Rusted Pieces"
. Archived from
the original
on 2011-05-26
. Retrieved
2007-10-25
.
- ^
Prato, Greg.
"Jesus Christ Pose" review
.
Allmusic
- ^
a
b
Chonin, Neva (2001-03-23).
"Madonna's No 'Pussy Cat': MTV bans her latest video, again"
.
San Francisco Chronicle
. Archived from
the original
on January 26, 2004
. Retrieved
2007-05-26
.
"What It Feels Like For a Girl" was rejected for heavy rotation by MTV and its affiliate VH1. Too violent, they say. This, from a corporation that makes a mint off marketing gangsta culture to the suburban masses.
- ^
Gundersen, Edna (2003-08-07).
"Primus exerts 'Animal' magnetism"
.
USA Today
.
- ^
"The Realms of Deth - Other Megadeth Music Videos"
. Archived from
the original
on 2007-11-02
. Retrieved
2007-11-02
.
- ^
Nuzum 2001
, p. 92
- ^
"The Unofficial DeGarmo & Key Homepage"
.
The Unofficial DeGarmo & Key Homepage
. Retrieved
2017-07-31
.
- ^
M.I.A., No Loss For Words
- ^
MetalSucks – Suicide Silence, "The Price of Beauty"
- ^
"KNAC.COM - News - Burning human"
. Archived from
the original
on 2011-07-13
. Retrieved
2009-09-07
.
- ^
"CMT Pulls Controversial Jason Aldean Music Video, Country Singer Defends Song"
.
The Hollywood Reporter
. Retrieved
2023-07-19
.
- ^
"Cardigan's Crash video banned"
.
NME
. September 8, 1998
. Retrieved
February 27,
2011
.
Sources
[
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]
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Media regulation
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Methods
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