- Fri Mar 02, 2012 7:46 pm
#460014
I've just seen this question asked elsewhere on the forum, and as I was wondering the same thing whilst listening this morning I thought I'd Ask Aled for an answer. How, when Radio 1 now appears to have such a strict policy on what you can and can't say on air, were you able to play Tubthumping by Chumbawamba, complete with the lyrics 'pissing the night away' during today's Golden Hour?
You also played the brilliant 'Love is the Law' by The Seahorses, which contains the lyrics 'She was a rum old slapper and we always tried to get her pants off when she phoned'. If Chris or Dave called someone a slapper on air now (as I can definitely remember them doing on a number of occasions in their afternoon days) I'm sure the studio phone would start ringing the second the words left their mouth. I'm certainly not complaining here, just curious about why the anti-fun police that roam the corridors of power at R1 haven't cracked down on these little things yet? Are there different rules for potentially offensive words when they are part of a song's lyrics?
You also played the brilliant 'Love is the Law' by The Seahorses, which contains the lyrics 'She was a rum old slapper and we always tried to get her pants off when she phoned'. If Chris or Dave called someone a slapper on air now (as I can definitely remember them doing on a number of occasions in their afternoon days) I'm sure the studio phone would start ringing the second the words left their mouth. I'm certainly not complaining here, just curious about why the anti-fun police that roam the corridors of power at R1 haven't cracked down on these little things yet? Are there different rules for potentially offensive words when they are part of a song's lyrics?
Last edited by Emmy on Fri Mar 02, 2012 10:21 pm, edited 1 time in total.