- Thu Apr 21, 2011 9:17 am
#434990
I agree with everything you're saying here, and it doesn't make sense to be able to say the words but not sing them. The more they say the word 'boobies' on air the more I doubt my original assertion! I am a professional feminist (MA in Women's Studies), and it doesn't offend me, but then I do also have a sense of humour...
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jamiec21 wrote:nicola_red wrote:However...you have to think of who's listening. Not target audience, but children (remember it's the Easter holidays). Do their parents want them repeating some of the phrases in the song? Do parents want to have to explain to their 5 year old what the lyrics meant? Nope. So for that reason, I think Aled make the right decision.
Well, didn't Chris say some of the words later on? I know he said "boobies", and there was also talk about if it's possible to be "wobbly and firm", to which someone texted in "yes, with jelly". The only word which didn't get mentioned was "tight-arsed" which was probably the one they all agreed they should edit out. It wasn't the words that were the problem, it was the context. My point was that if you take it on a level as the lyrics in some of their songs, the misogyny was extremely low and if you take it at it's humorous, tongue-in-cheek core and tone, then virtually non-existent, IMO. I know R1 have edited Rihanna's "S&M", to much controversy, and most songs of that ilk seem to have a radio edit, but it does seem to be as if the artists and their songs can get away with more than the actual voices of the radio station. Which doesn't seem right and fair to me, although I do accept they are employees of the station and therefore will have more responsibility. But I tune into R1 and The Chris Moyles Show for the personalities, not the music, so I automatically get annoyed when I feel the creativity and natural humorous intentions of the team are getting, in my opinion, unnecessarily obstructed because of the ever-increasing thinning skin of BBC management.
Anyway, I wonder how many parents have to explain the general lyrical content of Snoop Dogg's "Sweat" to their five year olds. No wonder Aled called him "creepy" the other day.
I agree with everything you're saying here, and it doesn't make sense to be able to say the words but not sing them. The more they say the word 'boobies' on air the more I doubt my original assertion! I am a professional feminist (MA in Women's Studies), and it doesn't offend me, but then I do also have a sense of humour...
Bas wrote:She's the Tina Daheley of chrismoyles.net
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