Podcasts about seven dirty words

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Best podcasts about seven dirty words

Latest podcast episodes about seven dirty words

Churros  y Palomitas
¿Quién esterilizó al cine contemporáneo? Ep06

Churros y Palomitas

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 20, 2024 75:00


El cine es un medio caracterizado por ser progresista… o eso parecía. Algunos estudios recientes han mostrado que cada vez son menos las propuestas atrevidas capaces de desafiar al espectador, y eso incluye tocar temas como la política y el sexo. En esta entrega revisaremos quién le cortó sus huevitos y esterilizó al séptimo arte.¿Tienes cuenta de Amazon Prime? ¡Puedes apoyar este proyecto donando el dinero de Jeff Bezos y a ti no te cuesta nada! Instrucciones aquí.Lecturas de Interés:Follows suggests a number of possible reasons behind the decline of the sex scene, including changes in audience taste with a “preference for content that either avoids sexual themes altogether or handles them with more subtlety”; concerns that sex scenes may impact on global release “result[ing] in more restrictive age ratings or censorship, hence reducing a film's potential reach”; and the increasing influence of “intimacy coordinators”, reflecting actors' discomfort at the amount of sex scenes they had previously been asked to do.The adage has long been that sex sells, but now it appears the opposite is true—at least at the Cineplex. The explanations paint a picture of an industry that has rarely put morals above profits yet suddenly wants to keep its clothes on.“You're talking about [blocking] deals that are worth billions because a political figure is angry with you,” Galloway says. “And whether the government wins or not, every company wants to avoid being part of that.”Seven Dirty Words.Con todo, hay gente que se queja de cómo los medios “destruyen la inocencia de los niños”.Los sistemas de clasificaciones y el mercado internacionalEsta entrega fue traída gracias a:Productora Ejecutiva: Blanca LópezProductor Asociado: Juan Carlos Toledo Pérez NúñezCo-Productor: Dany SaadiaCo-Productor: Logan MayerCo-Productor: Román RangelAgradecimiento especial a nuestros Patreons: Adriana Fernández, Agustín Galván, Odeen Rocha, Jaime Rosales, Juan Espíritu, Luiso Uribe, Zert, Luis Gallardo, Álvaro Vázquez, Arturo Manrique, Lau Berdejo, Marce, Alejandro Alemán, Arturo Aguilar, Enrique Vázquez, Ernesto Diezmartínez, Jorge I. Figueroa, Mariana Padilla, Tania RG y Fernando Alonso.¡Gracias a nuestros suscriptores en Twitch ! coyoterax, jiff01 y cronicasdeespantoTú también puedes apoyar la creación de este y más programas y recibir crédito (para que aumentes currículum) y otros extras exclusivos en www.patreon.com/churrosypalomitas¿Quieren continuar la discusión? Tenemos nuestro canal de Discord de Charlas y Palomitas, con distintos temas, unos solo para productores del show y otros para toda la banda.

Rover's Morning Glory
He's just Jeff, Charlie says leave your kids at home, OnlyFans, seven dirty words, and more!

Rover's Morning Glory

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 10, 2024 178:30


New hair, who dis? Twitch streamer, Sketch, was outed for his past OnlyFans account. The 7 dirty words. A 4-month-old baby died after the family took their 2 kids on their boat when it was 120 degrees outside. Charlie says parents should keep their kids at home until they turn two-years-old. Football versus skydiving. A family started a GoFundMe because their autistic son ripped off a car hood ornament. George Stephanopoulos comments on Biden being in office for another term. Why did Rover obsess with radio at such a young age? JLR has a dentist appointment.

Minimum Competence
Legal News for Weds 7/3 - Kansas Blocks Biden Title IX Protections, SCOTUS Impact on 1/6 Rioters, Firms Respond to New Limits on Agency Powers and Column on Auditing Top 1% of Filers

Minimum Competence

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 3, 2024 8:21


This Day in Legal History: Carlin's Seven Dirty Words Get to SCOTUSOn July 3, 1978, the US Supreme Court delivered a landmark decision in FCC v. Pacifica Foundation, affirming the Federal Communications Commission's (FCC) authority to reprimand New York radio station WBAI for airing George Carlin's "Seven Dirty Words" comedy routine. The 5-4 ruling centered on Carlin's sketch, which listed words inappropriate for public broadcast. The Court held that the FCC could regulate indecent material on public airwaves during times when children might be listening. Justice John Paul Stevens, writing for the majority, emphasized that broadcast media have unique accessibility to children and thus require special considerations. This ruling underscored the government's role in safeguarding public morality on airwaves, distinguishing broadcast media from other forms of communication due to its pervasive presence and accessibility. The decision sparked ongoing debates about free speech and government regulation, influencing policies on broadcasting standards and the permissible content on public airwaves.A federal district court in Kansas has preliminarily blocked an Education Department rule that protects children from discrimination based on gender identity in schools receiving federal funding. Judge John W. Broomes issued the injunction, affecting Alaska, Kansas, Utah, and Wyoming. This rule, which extends Title IX protections to include sexual orientation and gender identity, has now been blocked in 14 states, following similar injunctions last month.Judge Broomes, appointed by Trump, found that the states are likely to succeed in their claim that the Biden Administration exceeded its authority by expanding the definition of sex discrimination. The states argued that the regulation's definition of sexual harassment would suppress the speech of students who believe sex is immutable and binary, and who use biologically accurate pronouns. Broomes agreed, stating that the rule's definition of sex-based harassment is impermissibly vague under the Administrative Procedure Act.This decision is a setback for the Biden Administration's efforts to enhance LGBTQ rights. Since the Supreme Court's 2015 Obergefell v. Hodges decision, which guaranteed same-sex marriage, conservative legal efforts have focused on issues such as transgender bathroom bans, athlete bans, and restrictions on gender-affirming care for minors.The Department of Justice has not yet commented on the ruling. The case, Kansas v. Dep't of Education, is represented by the Kansas Attorney General's Office.Biden's Title IX Transgender Protections Blocked by Kansas JudgeIn light of a recent Supreme Court ruling narrowing a criminal obstruction law, lawyers for Jan. 6 Capitol rioters are preparing to challenge convictions and seek reduced sentences. The Supreme Court's decision requires prosecutors to prove that defendants destroyed or altered documents to convict them under the obstruction statute, impacting over 200 cases related to the Capitol riot.Attorneys have indicated plans to file motions in the US District Court for the District of Columbia to dismiss charges or seek resentencing for clients who did not handle documents, particularly those linked to the Oath Keepers. This move will significantly affect cases where the obstruction charge was the sole felony. Carmen Hernandez, a criminal defense lawyer, anticipates various creative legal arguments in response to the ruling.The Supreme Court's 6-3 decision on June 28, which favored Capitol rioter Joseph Fischer, has set a new precedent for interpreting the obstruction statute, originally enacted to address evidence destruction post-Enron scandal. This ruling is a setback for federal prosecutors who had heavily relied on the statute to charge participants in the Capitol attack. Elizabeth Franklin-Best, appealing for Oath Keepers' leader Stewart Rhodes, expects the ruling to substantially impact his sentence, as he was also convicted of seditious conspiracy.Several attorneys for other Jan. 6 defendants have indicated intentions to seek relief based on the Fischer ruling. The DC courts will likely face an influx of filings for years. The broader immediate impact is somewhat limited as only 249 out of over 1,400 charged individuals were affected by the statute, with 52 cases having obstruction as the only felony.The Justice Department is still evaluating the ruling's implications, and early signals suggest prosecutors might not concede in all cases. Some defense lawyers are preparing to argue that the initial indictments were flawed under the new interpretation. However, outcomes will likely vary, with hurdles for those who pled guilty before the ruling, and effectiveness depending on individual judges and defendants.The Supreme Court's re-interpretation of the obstruction statute, requiring proof of document destruction or alteration, is critical. This change affects the foundation of many convictions and challenges the prosecutorial approach, necessitating a reassessment of cases and potentially leading to significant legal revisions and reductions in sentences.Jan. 6 Rioters to Request Relief After Supreme Court RulingUS law firms are quickly capitalizing on recent Supreme Court decisions that limit federal agency powers. Within hours of these rulings, firms began sending updates and hosting webinars to explain the implications to their clients. The Supreme Court's decisions, made over three days, restrict agencies' use of internal judges, overturn the Chevron deference principle (which required courts to defer to agency interpretations of ambiguous laws), and revive challenges related to statute limitations, potentially leading to more lawsuits over old regulations.Experts believe these rulings will significantly boost administrative law challenges, particularly benefiting firms that frequently contest federal regulations. Many lawyers have reported a surge in client inquiries, noting that the end of Chevron deference might lead businesses to pursue more litigation due to increased chances of success. The statute of limitations decision is also expected to result in more legal actions, though some attorneys predict a gradual increase rather than an immediate surge in new cases.Some attorneys highlight that the post-Chevron landscape is creating uncertainty and questions among clients across various industries. There is an expectation that while some companies may adopt a more aggressive litigation strategy, others might prefer lobbying to challenge regulations, as many corporate clients are cautious about escalating legal expenses.Overall, the Supreme Court's rulings are reshaping the legal environment, prompting law firms to guide clients through this evolving landscape and capitalize on emerging opportunities.US law firms smell opportunity as Supreme Court guts agency powers | ReutersIn my column, I argue that the IRS's shift to a broader audit mandate for all high-income taxpayers could undermine tax compliance improvements. The IRS needs to reassess and refine its audit strategies to optimize resources and maximize compliance, particularly among the wealthiest individuals. I propose a hybrid audit strategy that ensures nearly 100% audit coverage for the top 1% of income earners, with progressively lower rates for lower high-income brackets. This approach would be more effective than the current broad mandate, which lacks specific metrics for measuring success and could fail to capture significant non-compliance.Previously, the IRS had a directive to audit at least 8% of returns for individuals with incomes over $10 million, which was a focused and measurable effort. The new policy, however, aims for broader scrutiny without clear methods to gauge effectiveness, raising concerns about its impact on audit rates and overall compliance. My suggested hybrid approach would combine the precision of the former directive with a progressive audit threshold system, concentrating IRS resources where they can yield the highest return.Focusing on high-income taxpayers with the greatest potential for avoidance ensures better deterrence of tax evasion. The Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration's report supports this, showing that audits of high-income individuals are more productive. By defining specific audit coverage thresholds for the highest income brackets, the IRS can optimize its efforts and expand compliance audits down the income brackets.The critical legal element here is the need for targeted and measurable audit strategies. Specific metrics are essential to ensure the IRS's audit efforts are efficient and effective, allowing the agency to allocate resources where they can achieve the greatest impact on revenue and compliance.IRS Hybrid Audit Approach Best Bet to Scrutinize Rich Taxpayers This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.minimumcomp.com/subscribe

Get Reel with Richard Walter
Seven Dirty Words in Hollywood

Get Reel with Richard Walter

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 27, 2024 9:27


Do you have any questions about screenwriting? Hit reply or comment and I'll do my best to answer them in future episodes. :-)Thanks for sharing, subscribing, and following Get Reel With Richard Walter, available for free on Substack, Spotify, and Apple Podcasts.PS- I have a new novel! It's called Deadpan, and here's a rave review. Get full access to Get Reel with Richard Walter at richardwalter.substack.com/subscribe

Sharp & Benning
May 4, Segment 6 – The Seven Dirty Words

Sharp & Benning

Play Episode Listen Later May 4, 2023 19:42


We remember more of the comedy greats, including the late George Carlin.

george carlin seven dirty words
WikiSleep Podcast
Episode 189: George Carlin: The Dean of Counterculture

WikiSleep Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 6, 2023 26:58


George Carlin was an American stand-up comedian, actor, social critic and author who is regarded as one of the most important and influential stand-up comics of all time. Dubbed the Dean of Counterculture, his "Seven Dirty Words" routine fought against the conservative sensibilities of the era—and although a judge deemed it to be within his rights to perform under free speech laws, he was still arrested a total of seven times reciting it.........#WikiSleep #SleepStories #WikiSleepPodcast #GeorgeCarlin #SevenDirtyWords #FreeSpeech #MentalHealth #Sleep #ASMR #Podcast #Stories  By becoming a WikiSleep member, you're investing in your own ad-free sleep health—and sleep health is mental health. Thank you for being a supporter. https://plus.acast.com/s/wikisleep. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Millennial Man Motions Entertainment
Entitlement 2023 Discussion with ilya

Millennial Man Motions Entertainment

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 22, 2023 32:41


https://anchor.fm/mmmentertainmentllc/episodes/The-Seven-Dirty-Words-by-George-Carlin-e1bjco4 ___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ anchor.fm/mmmentertainmentllc/subscribe __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ www.paypal.com/paypalme/mmmentertainmentllc rumble.com/user/MillennialManMotionsEntertainmentLLC www.facebook.com/millennialmanmotionsisthelifeoftheparty --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/mmmentertainmentllc/message

Timesuck with Dan Cummins
314 - George Motherf*cking Carlin: Best To Ever Do It

Timesuck with Dan Cummins

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 19, 2022 185:45


Get ready to meet one of my comedy heroes, but only if you can handle a LOT of profanity. George Carlin, following the path of his mentor, Lenny Bruce, kicked the doors of censorship down so people like myself could have careers in comedy, and not worry about being arrested for saying something "obscene."  Today, we learn about the amazing, prolific, inspiring life of George Carlin - how a boy raised by a single mother in New York City grew up to become a radio DJ, then part of two man comedy team, then a solo nightclub act who first achieved success after some early struggles as a clean-cut, mainstream comic. He next decided to follow his counterculture leanings only to lose it all, rebuild into something better, nearly lose it all again, and then become the Carlin of legend. Carlin battled a crippling cocaine addiction, domestic problems at home, a business that wrote him off numerous times, battles with a government that tried to censor him over and over again, and much more to end up with fourteen HBO comedy specials and the designation of one of the best, if not THE best to ever do it - the father of modern standup. Myself and the rest of the comedy community owe him a huge debt of gratitude, and I'm excited to share his life with you here today, on another biographical episode, of Timesuck. Bad Magic Productions Monthly Patreon Donation:  In honor of the passing of Jeff Burton from the Rizzuto Show aka the Rizz Show on 105.7 FM in St Louis, we are donating $16,640 to Jeff's charity of choice - Kids Rock Cancer. Through the proven healing power of music therapy, Kids Rock Cancer helps children combat feelings of anxiety, depression, uncertainty, and helplessness.  To find out more, go to KidsRockCancer.org  We also are donating $1850 to our scholarship fund! Watch the Suck on YouTube: https://youtu.be/lJkZj_F42uIMerch: https://www.badmagicmerch.comDiscord! https://discord.gg/tqzH89vWant to join the Cult of the Curious private Facebook Group? Go directly to Facebook and search for "Cult of the Curious" in order to locate whatever happens to be our most current page :)For all merch related questions/problems: store@badmagicproductions.com (copy and paste)Please rate and subscribe on iTunes and elsewhere and follow the suck on social media!! @timesuckpodcast on IG and http://www.facebook.com/timesuckpodcastWanna become a Space Lizard?  Click here: https://www.patreon.com/timesuckpodcastSign up through Patreon and for $5 a month you get to listen to the Secret Suck, which will drop Thursdays at Noon, PST. You'll also get 20% off of all regular Timesuck merch PLUS access to exclusive Space Lizard merch. You get to vote on two Monday topics each month via the app. And you get the download link for my new comedy album, Feel the Heat. Check the Patreon posts to find out how to download the new album and take advantage of other benefits.

Millennial Man Motions Entertainment

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Your Brain on Facts
Courthouse Rock (ep 192)

Your Brain on Facts

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 19, 2022 34:30


Not all heroes wear capes.  Some wear leather jackets with chains, long hair, and lots of eyeliner!  Today we look at three times heavy metal musicians said "We're not gonna take it" and defended the freedom of speech, but were they "Breaking the Law" and just "Howl(ing) at the Moon"? 0:42 Twisted Sister vs Congress 17:07 Reviews and news 19:58 Ozzy Osbourne's Suicide Solution 26:20 Judas Priest, Better Than You 28:28 Subliminal back-masking 1-star review shirt! and shirt raising money for Ukraine Red Cross at yourbrainonfacts.com/merch Links to all the research resources are on the website. Hang out with your fellow Brainiacs.  Reach out and touch Moxie on Facebook, Twitter,  or Instagram.  Become a patron of the podcast arts! Patreon or Ko-Fi.  Or buy the book and a shirt. Music: Kevin MacLeod, It's not unusual for the business side of the music business to include trips to the courthouse.  Usually, these are for copyright infringement, someone else ripping off your schtick.  In the halcyon days of 2005, the band Slipknot was moved to sue, of all people, Burger King for their commercial with a fake band, all in scary masks and costumes, called Cock Rock.   The best way to describe the 1980's would be to say, you had to see it to believe it.  Weird times, man.  If we weren't panicking about Russia, we were moral-panicking over Satanic things like heavy-metal music and Dungeons and Dragons, the things that make life worth living and were supposedly at the core of wildly rampant crises of child sex abuse and teen suicide.  In the red corner, the busy-body buzzkill today is Tipper Gore, then-wife of then-congressman Al, who had it in her head that rock music was a huge threat to the bedrock of society.  Feel free to picture Helen Lovejoy [sfx clip].  And in the blue corner, an unlikely hero in the form of Dee Snider, front man of oh so typical larger than life hair metal band Twisted Sister.     The trouble started when Tipper bought her 11-year-old daughter a copy of the album "Purple Rain," the smash-hit album from the *R-rated film, both courtesy of *Prince.  And Tipper was shocked, *shocked to hear inappropriate lyrics.  She clearly did not know his body of work.  "Darling Nikki" was a bridge too far, and if you know, you know.  With bra cups brimming with righteous indignation, Tipper gathered like-minded, and I'm assuming bored, wives of senators, cabinet members, and prominent businessmen to for the Parents Music Resource Council or PMRC.  But this wasn't censorship, the PMRC wanted everyone to know.  It was just about helping parents make informed decisions.  They wanted to see music rated like movies, with warnings for the R-rated stuff.   Critics pointed out that that was easier said than done.  The Motion Picture Association of America rated about 350 movies a year. By contrast the Recording Industry Association of America saw 25,000 songs a year being released in those days.  To focus their efforts, the PMRC threw down the gauntlet on the "Filthy Fifteen," a list of songs from the likes of Madonna and Sheena Easton to AC/DC and Judas Priest, that were part of what Gore called "the twisted tyranny of explicitness in the public domain." I did a Thundercats burlesque number to one of the songs.  Care to guess which one?    While the PMRC wasn't an official government anything, the record industry needed to stay on their good side.  They were lobbying for a tax on blank cassettes, absolutely besides themselves over the idea of losing money to tape dubbing.  Four members of the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation were all married to PMRC members.  This was enough for the RIAA to cross the street to get away from the principles of free expression in hopes of getting the blank-tape tax.   When the Senate committee called for hearings on this issue.  Arguing for totally'not'censorship, you guys, were PMRC members, child-health experts, and religious figures.  Standing up for their rights as musicians was an interesting trio – Twister Sister's Dee Snider, folk singer John Denver, and I would not insult him by trying to affix a label, gonzo rock god Frank Zappa.  We don't know how many musicians were invited, but they were the only ones who showed up.   Anyone else who was invited missed the chance for a lot of press – the hearing room was packed with reporters and tv cameras til the fourth estate were packed in like sardines.  PMRC husband Sen. Hollings played their hand right away, referring to the music in question as "porn rock," saying "If I could find some way to constitutionally do away with it, I would."  I bet he's fun at parties.  Sen. Paula Hawkins waved off concerns about artists' rights of free expression under the First Amendment as she waved away the idea of parental responsibility, and bemoaned rock music becoming much more explicit in the 30 years since Elvis.  A 2012 study by Elizabeth Langdon at Cleveland State University found that music has indeed grown more explicit in its sexual content, but "the sexual attitudes and behaviors (and related outcomes) of adolescents do not appear to be following suit at the national level."    When it came time to make their case before the government, Tipper Gore and Susan Baker, wife of then-Treasury Secretary James Baker, testified on behalf of the PMRC.  Album art, a much bigger part of the whole music buying and enjoying process.  Remember liner notes with all the lyics?  It was like Christmas!  Those albums that had Playboy, Boris Vallejo, or Saw vibes on their jacket were used as evidence.  A local pastor read salacious lyrics about bondage, incest, and "anal vapors"...to unrestrained tittering and laughter.  A child psychiatrist testified that David Berkowitz, the serial killer called "Son of Sam," was known to listen to Black Sabbath. sigh  You shouldn't be allowed to get a degree without understanding the difference between correlation and causation.     Then the defense took the stand.  Rally, lads!  Zappa was up first, looking as not Frank Zappa as I ever saw, with short hair and a suit.  "I've heard some conflicting reports on whether or not people on this committee want legislation. I understand that Senator Hollings does." Sen. James Exon butted in, saying he might support legislation that makes the music industry "voluntarily" clean up its act, which Zappa astutely pointed out is “hardly voluntary." [sfx clip]   "The PMRC proposal is an ill-conceived piece of nonsense which fails to deliver any real benefits to children, infringes the civil liberties of people who are not children, and promises to keep the courts busy for years, dealing with the interpretation and enforcement problems inherent in the proposal's design.  It is my understanding that, in law, First Amendment issues are decided with a preference for the least restrictive alternative. In this context, the PMRC's demands are the equivalent of treating dandruff by decapitation."   He took dead aim at the inherent conflict of interest and said the whole issue was a facade for "trade-restraining legislation, whipped up like an instant pudding by the Wives of Big Brother."  Chef kiss.  The senators were less impressed.  Thankfully the next at-bat was Ivory soap clean, openly devout Christian John Denver, or as Dee Snider later described him, "mom-American-pie- John-Denver-Christmas-special- fresh-scrubbed guy."    Despite his broad appeal, Denver was no stranger to censorship, which he warned the PMRC was approaching.  "Rocky Mountain High," one of his biggest hits, was banned from some radio stations for drug references that weren't actually there.  "What assurance have I that any national panel to review my music would make any better judgment?" Denver asked the senators.  A "self-appointed moral watchdog," he argued, was antithetical to the ideals of a democratic society, the sort of thing you saw in Nazi Germany.  Denver then excused himself from the hearing because he had a meeting with NASA in hopes of becoming the first civilian in space.  Not a word of a lie.  Luckily, he didn't make the cut; the flight in question was the catastrophic last flight of the Challenger.   With the opening acts out of the way, it was time for the headliner, Dee Snider, who quite plausibly believes [1] “the PMRC — or the senators whose wives were in the PMRC — invited me to make a mockery out of me in front of the world."  When Snider walked in, they probably thought they'd gotten their wish.  He was wearing his “dirtbag couture” – jeans, a tank top, sunglasses, and voluminous bottle-blond hair.   But Dee Snider wasn't the airhead they were expecting.  He introduced himself as a married father, a Christian, and neither drinks nor does drugs.  He'd brought his Army and NYPD veteran father with him. (Zappa brought his kids, Moon Unit and Dweezil because they were Twisted Sister fans.)  He addressed Tipper personally for her misinterpretation and misrepresentation of his song "Under the Blade," which they claimed was about S&M and rape, citing the lyrics “Your hands are tied, your legs are strapped, a light shines in your eyes/You faintly see a razor's edge, you open your mouth to cry.”  Snider countered was about their bassist Eddie Ojeda having surgery, literally going under the knife.  "Ms. Gore was looking for sadomasochism and bondage and she found it," indicating the bondage was a metaphor for fear. Snider later wrote for the Huffington Post that he enjoyed the "raw hatred I saw in Al Gore's eyes when I said Tipper Gore had a dirty mind."    Snider highlighted another accusation from Tipper Gore, "You look at even the t-shirts that kids wear and you see Twisted Sister and a woman in handcuffs sort of spread-eagled."  This was a complete untruth.  Twisted Sister "never sold a shirt of this type; we have always taken great pains to steer clear of sexism in our merchandise, records, stage show, and personal lives. Furthermore, we have always promoted the belief that rock and roll should not be sexist, but should cater to males and females equally."  He challenged Tipper to produce any such shirt and when asked about it again by Senator Al Gore, Gore clarified for the record that "the word 't-shirts' was in plural, and one of them referred to Twisted Sister and the other referred to a woman in handcuffs." Snider stuck to his guns insisting Tipper was referring to Twisted Sister before Senator Gore changed the subject.   During Snider's testimony, Senator Ernest Hollings from South Carolina asked him about different perceptions of obscenity and vulgarity. He read part of a Supreme Court verdict in the Pacifica Case involving the Federal Communications Commission (famous for the role George Carlin's "Seven Dirty Words" played in it). In the case, the Supreme Court ruled that "Patently offensive, indecent material presented over the airwaves confronts the citizen not only in public, but also in the privacy of the home. The individual's right to be left alone, plainly outweighs the first amendment rights of an intruder."   They still hadn't figured out who they were dealing with.  Snider pointed out there was a difference between the airwaves”  as opposed to a person going with their money to purchase an album to play in their room, in their home, on their own time. The airwaves are something different."    Sen. Al Gore opened his questioning of Snider by asking what the initials of their fan club “S.M.F.” stood for.  [x] "It stands for the Sick Motherf------ Friends of Twisted Sister," Snider testified. "Is this also a Christian group?" Gore asked, to a smattering of laughter. "I don't believe profanity has anything to do with Christianity," Snider said.  I could watch replays of that hearing all day.   [y] "The beauty of literature, poetry, and music is that they leave room for the audience to put its own imagination, experience, and dreams into the words," Snider testified.  "There is no authority who has the right or the necessary insight to make these judgments. Not myself, not the federal government, not some recording industry committee, not the PTA, not the RIAA, and certainly not the PMRC," Snider said. [sfx clip?]   When it was said and done, it's unlikely that many minds were changed by the hearing. Although, despite the protestations to the contrary, quite a few senators and witnesses had explicitly argued in favor of government action.  No laws were passed, but they still got results.  The RIAA agreed to work with the PMRC on labeling objectionable content with a bold black and white sticker reading "Parental Advisory: Explicit Lyrics."  So the rockers kinda lost, but they were awesome and I'm counting it as a moral victory.   That black and white sticker was worse than a Scarlet Letter.  Huge retailers like Walmart would not sell "labeled" records, period, cutting out a huge slice of the marketplace for "labeled" artists. Some smaller stores were threatened with eviction if they stocked "labeled" records.  The city of San Antonio barred "labeled" artists from performing.  Maryland and Pennsylvania debated requiring retailers to keep it in an "adults-only" area of the store.  Dead Kennedys singer Jello Biafra was prosecuted in California over "Distribution of Harmful Material to Minors."   But musicians would have the last laugh.  The explicit lyrics sticker very quickly went from mark to shame to selling point.  Retailers realized the money they were missing out on and began stocking the albums.  Teens and young adults would often buy albums *because they had the warning.  In fact, if you were hard-cord or counter-culture or punk in any way but didn't have a warning label, scoff!  There was also a shed load of reaction music, including Danzig's only mainstream hit. [sfx clip] Nowadays, not only have our buying habits changed, but our standards have too.     MIDROLL   CW: The following section is about news events subsequent to suicides, without going into too much detail about the suicides themselves.  If that's not where your head is today, no worries, we'll catch up next week.   In 1986, Sharon Osbourne called her management client and husband Ozzy Osbourne that he had to get on a plane as fast as possible and get to LA.  Like a phone call from a movie, she refused to tell him why, but demanded he go now.  Ozzy landed in LA into the loving embrace of a batallion of reporter's microphones and those stupidly bright news camera lights, asking him how he responded to the suicide.  What Sharon could have taken 10 seconds to explain to him was that the previous year, 19 year old John McCollum was found dead of a self-inflicted gunshot wound in his California bedroom.  The album Blizzard of Oz which he'd allegedly been listening to for at least six hours straight, was still spinning on the stereo turntable.  McCollum's parents believed Osbourne was responsible, that his song “Suicide Solution” was a proximate cause of their son's death.  Okay, that was about 20 seconds, but I stand on my statement.   In their lawsuit, McCollum's parents claimed that there were hidden lyrics in the song that incited John to kill himself, with messages like “get the gun and try it, shoot, shoot, shoot.”  Osbourne countered that the song wasn't about a solution as in an answer, but a solution as in a liquid, specifically the one he was at the time slowly killing *himself with, and which has killed AC/DC's Bon Scott, alcohol.   [ozzy 1] "Suicide Solution wasn't written about, 'Oh that's the solution, suicide.' I was a heavy drinker and I was drinking myself to an early grave. It was suicide solution," Ozzy said later.  "Wine is fine but whiskey's quicker. Suicide is slow with liquor. That's what I was doing for a long while.”     The plaintiff's case was that the song Suicide Solution should be exempt from the first Amendment's freedom of speech.  In the US, you're free to express any viewpoint or feelings, up to a point – it is not legal to directly incite specific, imminent actions which cause harm to others.  That's hard to prove and virtually every attempt to hold an entertainer responsible for allegedly inciting action has failed.  One notable exception, and a replacement for the tired old ‘you can't yell fire in a crowded theater' example is that of radio disc jockey The Real Don Steele, who told listeners to hurry as quickly as they could to a certain Los Angeles address to win a prize.  This is 1970, only two years after seat belts became mandatory, and people were getting in crack-ups, and one motorist who had no idea what was happening was killed.  In a case still taught in law schools everywhere, his family sued and the California Supreme Court ruled in their favor.  I really could do a whole episode just on radio promotions going terribly, terribly wrong.  At issue in the McCollum case was not whether there actually were hidden lyrics, but whether such lyrics are protected speech or incitement to violence.  If successful, the McCollum lawsuit would have had sweeping consequences for artists in every medium, potentially holding them liable for the actions of those who watched, read or listened to what they'd created.  At the very least, it would have made Ozzy too big a liability for any record label or concert promoter to associate themselves with, and it's not hard to imagine that that pariah status would spread to other metal bands.   [ozzy 2]“I feel very sad for the boy, and I felt terribly sad for the parents. As a parent myself, I'd be pretty devastated if something like that happened. And I have thought about this, if the boot was on the other foot, I couldn't blame the artist."   The suit wasn't just about Suicide Solution; they also blamed the song Paranoid.  Data point of one, but I can disprove that one by sheer force of math; it's probably my most-listened-to Ozzy or Sabbath song, with the very Un-Sabbath Laguna Sunrise as a close second.   Plaintiff's counsel Tom Anderson claimed McCollum had been a normal, happy well-adjusted young man, who listened to ″Suicide Solution″ for hours before killing himself, and that a low-frequency hum on the record, only audible if you were using headphones as McCollum had been, had caused him to be more susceptible to the song's hidden message.  Attorneys for CBS, Ozzy's record label and party in the suit, argued that Osbourne was no more responsible for a listeners' actions than Shakespeare would be for Hamlet's soliloquy, Tolstoy for Anna Karenina throwing herself under the wheels of a train, or the producers of “M.A.S.H.” for choosing “Suicide Is Painless” for its theme tune.  When Judge John Cole dismissed the case, spoiler alert, he left room for the plaintiffs to appeal over the mysterious hum, which they did; the appellate judge upheld the dismissal.   This wasn't the last time a fan's suicide resulted in legal action.  The family of another young man brought a similar lawsuit against Osbourne in 1986. Their case was also unsuccessful.   5 years later, CBS was back in court, though this time it was Judas Priest who found themselves in the dock, but with a pseudoscience twist.  In December 1985, 20-year-old James Vance and 18-year-old Raymond Belknap of Nevada, concluded a day of drinking, drugs, and heavy metal with an alleged suicide pact by means of self-inflicted shotgun fire.  Belknap died instantly, while Vance survived for a further three years, though without the lower half of his face, before eventually succumbing to complications.   The two families subsequently alleged that Priest had placed subliminal messages throughout 1978's Stained Class album, inciting fans to kill themselves.  The worst offender on the album was Better By You, Better Than Me, where messages like ‘Let's be dead' and ‘Do it' were smuggled in by means of backmasking.  Let's hop out of the shallow end for a deep dive here.  Backwards-masking or backmasking an intentional recording in which a message is recorded backward onto a track that is meant to be played forward.  It goes all the way back to the 70's, the 1870's, when Thomas Edison discovered the novelty of playing recorded music backwards.  The beat generation of the 50s started to purposely include reverse audio into their music and artists continued to play around with it for decades.  The Beatles deliberate [...].  This splashed fuel on the Paul-is-dead urban legend/conspiracy theory with supposed messages like “Paul is dead, miss him, miss him,” in “I'm So Tired” and “turn me on, dead man” in Revolution 9.  Audiophiles kept an ear out for it, but it didn't come to wide public knowledge until the 80's.  These days, Easter eggs and hidden goodies are shared on social media and YT, but back then, it was conservatives ruining cassettes and vinyl records by playing them backwards in church, community meetings, local access television, whatever venue they could get.  They claimed that the backwards speech could subliminally influence the listener when listening to the music in the normal way.  They found backmasking in everything from Elvis to Led Zepplin.  Supposedly Stairway to Heaven contained Satanic commands like “here's to my sweet Satan,” “serve me,” and “there's no escaping it.”     Audio Engineer Evan Olcott claims that backmasking or finding phonetic reversals is purely coincidental in which the spoken or sung phonemes, a fancy word for individual speech sounds, seem to form words.  Our brains make sense of our environment, or they try, any road, and that can mean convincing themselves that garbled sounds are actually words.  There's a key to claims of backmasking and it's priming, telling the listener what they're going to hear.  [sfx example]     Backmasking is supposed to work subliminally, meaning literally below the threshold of sensation of consciousness.  In theory, subliminal messages deliver an idea that the conscious mind doesn't detect.  For those too young to remember Tyler Durden's projectionist hobby, the prime example of subliminal messages is a single frame of text slipped into a video, which *has been used on TV by both corporations and political candidates.  Whenever one of these comes to light, there is always much contention, yet thoroughly negligible results.  If you can find a properly organized scientific study that bears out claims that messages you don't know you saw can influence people's behavior, call us here in the studio.  Until then, I plant my banner on the hill of It's Utter Crap.   At the time, Priest guitarist Glenn Tipton said: “It's a fact that if you play speech backwards, some of it will seem to make sense. So I asked permission to go into a studio and find some perfectly innocent phonetic flukes. The lawyers didn't want to do it, but I insisted. We bought a copy of the Stained Class album in a local record shop, went into the studio, recorded it to tape, turned it over and played it backwards. Right away we found ‘Hey ma, my chair's broken' and ‘Give me a peppermint' and ‘Help me keep a job'.”   At one point, frontman Rob Halford was called upon to actually sing part of the song while on the stand, which he looks really uncomfortable doing without so much as a metronome to accompany him.  “It tore us up emotionally hearing someone say to the judge and the cameras that this is a band that creates music that kills young people. We accept that some people don't like heavy metal, but we can't let them convince us that it's negative and destructive. Heavy metal is a friend that gives people great pleasure and enjoyment and helps them through hard times.”   Eventually, the case against Judas Priest and their label was dismissed.  The judge did agree that you could hear words other than the printed lyrics, but these were “only discernible after their location had been identified and after the sounds were isolated and amplified. The sounds would not be consciously discernible to the ordinary listener under normal listening conditions”.   And that's… Slipknot filed a copyright infringement suit claiming Burger King misappropriated their images. The King fired back that Slipknot didn't invent masked rockers, the post-apocalyptic gas masks aesthetic, or white guys with dreadlocks and, therefore, had no copyrights to claim. Ultimately, I guess they all realized they had more important things to do and the case was dropped. Sources: https://johndenver.com/about/biography/#:~:text=He%20then%20became%20a%20leading,during%20take%2Doff%20in%201986. https://www.ranker.com/list/dee-snyder-speech-parents-music-resource-center/melissa-sartore https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mother_(Danzig_song) https://ultimateclassicrock.com/dee-snider-pmrc-interview-2015/ https://www.suicideinfo.ca/resource/musicandsuicide/ https://faroutmagazine.co.uk/judas-priest-suicide-lawsuit-subliminal-messages/ https://www.loudersound.com/features/how-a-suicide-pact-was-almost-the-end-of-judas-priest https://pop.inquirer.net/106559/the-auditory-phenomenon-called-backmasking-unmasked https://ultimateclassicrock.com/backward-message-songs/ https://www.livescience.com/does-subliminal-messaging-work.html https://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/an-ozzy-osbourne-fan-commits-suicide https://www.kerrang.com/ozzy-osbourne-the-suicide-solution-controversy-and-what-the-song-actually-means https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1986-12-20-mn-4460-story.html https://apnews.com/article/05b56baebdc9ceaff3433f50fc941298 https://www.loudersound.com/features/how-a-suicide-pact-was-almost-the-end-of-judas-priest https://caselaw.findlaw.com/ca-court-of-appeal/1758714.html https://www.dreadcentral.com/news/287706/that-time-slipknot-sued-burger-king-over-coq-roq-chicken-fries-commercial https://loudwire.com/remember-when-slipknot-sued-burger-king/ https://ultimateclassicrock.com/backward-message-songs/

christmas america tv american california science rock los angeles law care russia ms christianity data moon army pennsylvania satan revolution chefs congress weird nasa maryland wine supreme court suicide standing south carolina walmart cbs beatles nevada senate commerce sabbath shakespeare hang attorney elvis oz teens san antonio rock and roll huffington post dungeons and dragons priest rally transportation wives blade big brother critics blizzard freedom of speech distribution amendment burger king playboy yt sm ac dc first amendment backwards satanic nypd hamlet challenger arguing nazi germany black sabbath retailers al gore ozzy osbourne thomas edison ozzy howl slipknot pta minors george carlin leo tolstoy frank zappa thundercats moxie judas priest paranoid purple rain this day in history john denver twisted sister danzig courthouse snider zappa mccollum subliminal senate committee plaintiffs dee snider federal communications commission sharon osbourne riaa anna karenina osbourne dead kennedys brainiac rob halford scarlet letter david berkowitz bon scott cleveland state university tyler durden tipper audiophiles california supreme court led zepplin rocky mountain high jello biafra paula hawkins sheena easton tipper gore recording industry association pmrc tom anderson midroll motion picture association belknap so tired backmasking darling nikki dweezil glenn tipton better than you suicide solution stained class twister sister boris vallejo seven dirty words john mccollum james vance
Millennial Man Motions Entertainment
The Seven Dirty Words by George Carlin

Millennial Man Motions Entertainment

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 12, 2021 16:55


https://anchor.fm/mmmentertainmentllc/episodes/Tenancious-Tuesday--My-Favorite-Comedians-eqfmar https://anchor.fm/mmmentertainmentllc/episodes/Meaningful-Monday--Important-Robin-Williams-Quotes-w-Honorable-Mentions-e1alhoq ______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ www.paypal.com/paypalme/mmmentertainmentllc rumble.com/user/MillennialManMotionsEntertainmentLLC www.facebook.com/millennialmanmotionsisthelifeoftheparty --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/mmmentertainmentllc/message

Choses à Savoir
Que sont les "Seven Dirty Words" ?

Choses à Savoir

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 9, 2021 2:30


Dans l'ensemble, la direction des chaînes de télévision et de radio américaines se montre assez puritaine dans le choix du langage admis à l'antenne. C'est ainsi que sept mots, appelés les "seven dirty words" en sont en principe totalement bannis.Des mots qu'on ne saurait entendreCes "sept mots grossiers" (ou "sales", pour reprendre le sens littéral) ont été volontairement intégrés par l'acteur et humoriste George Carlin dans un sketch de 1972. Il prévenait les spectateurs qu'il s'agissait de mots qu'ils ne pourraient en aucun cas prononcer à la télévision.De fait, on est en présence de mots très grossiers, voire orduriers. L'autorité fédérale chargée des communications, la FCC, jugeait en effet leur emploi indécent sur un plateau de télévision. Il ne s'agit d'ailleurs pas d'une liste exhaustive. Par ailleurs, tous les mots vulgaires sont interdits d'antenne entre 6h et 22 h.Si, dans le contexte de certains scénarios de films, on pouvait tolérer qu'un des personnages se laisse aller à dire "fucking" ("putain"), l'emploi d'un tel terme lors d'une retransmission télévisée paraissait en revanche déplacé à la FCC.C'est pourquoi les chaînes devaient recouvrir d'un "bip" un mot grossier lorsqu'il était employé dans une émission de télévision.Une victoire contre la censure ?L'autorité chargée des communications justifie cette forme de censure par la nécessité de lutter contre l'"indécence" à l'antenne et la volonté de protéger les enfants.Mais pour d'autres, il s'agit d'une atteinte à la liberté d'expression. Aussi la justice a-t-elle eu à se prononcer, à diverses reprises, sur cette délicate question. Une décision de la Cour suprême a donné quelques précisions sur la manière dont les autorités fédérales pouvaient intervenir pour réglementer le langage utilisé sur les plateaux.En 2006, un tribunal new yorkais avait jugé, en première instance, que l'interdiction d'un certain vocabulaire était disproportionnée et pouvait avoir un effet "paralysant".De son côté, la cour d'appel avait rappelé que, le voulût-elle, la FCC serait dans l'incapacité de dresser une liste exhaustive des mots inappropriés.Les associations défendant la liberté d'expression ont salué ces décisions de justice comme des victoires contre la censure. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Finding Your Way Through Therapy
E.14:The 7 Dirty Words In My Office, CBT, and Conditionals

Finding Your Way Through Therapy

Play Episode Play 30 sec Highlight Listen Later Sep 15, 2021 8:52


Welcome to season 2 of Finding Your Way Through Therapy. This episode contains one of my own creations, derived from some of the work I have done in the CBT words: The Seven Dirty Words in My Office. You will learn how these words sabotage your though process, how it is linked to cognitive behavioral therapy, as well as why these words can short-circuit your work in therapy.

Get Canceled
George Carlin

Get Canceled

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 11, 2021 14:39


We watched George Carlin's 2008 standup special, IT'S BAD FOR YA.  You should too.  It's quite relevant, and we've got some things to say.  For those of you who don't know, the warning/disclaimer of this show is inspired by THE SEVEN DIRTY WORDS.  Enjoy.

InSecurity
Kurtis Minder: The Seven Dirty Words of Cybersecurity

InSecurity

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 22, 2021 66:45


    “The bad guys know they are bad guys—they are trying to pretend to be businesspeople… as long as you pretend with them that this is just a normal business transaction, it goes better.”  -- Kurtis Minder; Fortune, 01 June 2021   If you have been reading about or watching news shows discussing ransomware, more than likely, you have seen Kurtis Minder. He has been nearly omnipresent across multiple platforms because his team at Groupsense has been putting in the work to help the victims of ransomware attacks negotiate with attackers in order to get their data back. Here's the best part… we're not talking about that. Not that it's not important, but there is a lot more that Kurtis and his team have been up to. Kurtis has brought the knowledge on that specific topic to television, podcasts and many other mediums in order to spread the word.   He has a lot more to say about the state of cybersecurity.   That is what we are here to talk about. Okay… we do talk about ransomware negotiation a bit, BUT… we dig deep into so much more.   Matt Stephenson welcomes Groupsense CEO and co-founder Kurtis Minder for a discussion about the Seven Dirty Words of Cybersecurity. Depending on your definition of a Dirty Word, this may be a cautionary or inspirational tale. Either way, Kurtis and his team are busting their asses to help secure the data, prevent attacks and… in the worst case scenario… help victims get their data back so they can continue to do their work. And he may be doing it while riding cross country on a motorcycle…     About Kurtis Minder     Kurtis Minder (@kurtisminder) is the founder of GroupSense, a threat intelligence company. He leads a team of analysts and technologists providing custom cybersecurity intelligence to brands around the globe. The company's analysts conduct cyber research and reconnaissance and map the threats to client risk profiles. He arrived at GroupSense after more than 20 years in role-spanning operations, design and business development at companies such as Mirage Networks (acquired by Trustwave), Caymas Systems (acquired by Citrix) and Fortinet (IPO).     About Matt Stephenson     Matt Stephenson (@packmatt73) leads the Social Media team at Forescout, which puts me in front of people all over the world. Prior to joining Forescout, I hosted podcasts, videos and live events all over the world which put me with experts on every corner of the cybersecurity landscape. The new No Name Security Podcast will continue and expand upon that tradition as we seak out the leading minds in the security industry as well as those may break things every now again. And… just for fun, there will be some wildcard guests as well.   In 10 years in the ecosystem of Data Protection and Cybersecurity I have toured the world extolling the virtues of Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning and how, when applied to information security, these technologies can wrong-foot the bad guys. Prior to the COVID shutdown, I was on the road over 100 days a year doing live malware demonstrations for audiences from San Diego to DC to London to Abu Dhabi to Singapore to Sydney. One of the funniest things I've ever been a part of was blowing up a live instance of NotPetya 6 hours after the news broke... in Washington DC... directly across the street from FBI HQ... as soon as we activated it a parade of police cars with sirens blaring roared past the building we were in. I'm pretty sure they weren't there for us, but you never know...   Whether at in person events, live virtual events or podcasting, I get to interview interesting people doing interesting things all over the world of cybersecurity and the extended world of hacking. Sometimes, that means hacking elections or the coffee supply chain... other times that means social manipulation or the sovereign wealth fund of a national economy.   Wherever I go, my job is all about talking with the people who build, manage or wreck the systems that we have put in place to make the world go round...     If you tuned in to any of my previous podcasts, there's great news! The No Name Security Podcast is here! I will be bringing the same kind of energy and array of guests you know and love. Best part? We're still at the same spot. You can find it at Spotify, Apple, Amazon Music & Audible as well as, GooglePlay, Gaana, Himalaya, I Heart Radio and wherever you get your podcasts!   Make sure you Subscribe, Rate and Review!

The Bridge
Rules of the Trade with John & Liu Yan

The Bridge

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 4, 2021 55:00


John recalls the first time a guest dropped a swear word on his live show, and the conversation goes to what is allowed and what isn't-and why. Liu Yan recalls Janet Jackson's "wardrobe malfunction" and how mainstream media is still the only place that is devoid of "The Seven Dirty Words" while with the flick of button, you can jump headlong into curse word central on one of a hundred channels. John recalls a few guests from his many years in radio, including a woman who literally spent six months living in her bed, to the most impressive and unforgettable guest-Capt. Jerry Coffee-who was one of the longest held POWS in Vietnam, and how one show with Capt. Coffee changed a listener's life. Finally, John and Liu Yan talk about their first real jobs-and how certain habits can last a lifetime.

No Cure for Curiosity
Bad Words

No Cure for Curiosity

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 16, 2021 30:52 Transcription Available


In our second episode, Shanny talks with Dona Warren, the Director of the Critical Thinking Center at UWSP, and Ross Tangedal, Assistant Professor of English and Director of the Cornerstone Press at the University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point, about swear words.In 1972 (49 years ago!) George Carlin released his famous bit "Seven Dirty Words."  I wanted to talk about this subject to emphasize that college is a place where we can explore anything we are curious about.  And I am very curious about swear words.  What makes certain words "bad"?  Why are they off-limits?  What can we learn about culture, gender, class, and history by thinking seriously about dirty words?Send your comments to nocureforcuriosity@outlook.com.Our intro music was written by UWSP music student Derek Carden and our logo is by artist and graphic designer Ryan Dreimiller.

Me Clicking RECord with Dane Curley
Episode 20 - Free Speech in Comedy & Music

Me Clicking RECord with Dane Curley

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 6, 2020 47:41


In October, 1973, WBAI radio in New York City aired legendary comedian George Carlin's "Seven Dirty Words" at around 2:00PM. A complaint was lodged by a listener, and the results of that complaint took the radio station (Pacifica Foundation) all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court in 1978. Years later in 1985, 22 individuals who called themselves the Parents Music Resource Center leveraged their disproportionate political power to challenge free enterprise in the music industry. Dane shares speeches by John Denver and Frank Zappa, and provides all the context surrounding these events, and how they lead to the present reduction of our 1st Amendment rights and greenlit situations of "limited Free Speech." His Song of the Day to Check Out is John Denver's "Rocky Mountain High."Note: George Carlin's "Seven Words You Can Never Say On Television" are now a preserved work in the Library of Congress's National Registry, along with the rest of his fantastic 1972 album Class Clown.This episode of MCREC, as well as my free story, "How To Get a Head in Life," now on MEDIUM, are brought to you by my Patreon patrons.Support the show (https://www.patreon.com/danecurley)

Industrial Industries World Radio
History of the Seven Dirty Words and Profanity

Industrial Industries World Radio

Play Episode Listen Later May 11, 2020 65:12


WARNING: This episode contains an intense amount of explicit language and cuss words (only for historical reference though, of course). Just a fair warning!In this 30th episode of IIWR, it's time to get dirty with the dirty 30 and look at the history of the famous "Seven Dirty Words" and figure out how and why they are considered obscene, vulgar, and DIRTY!Also to celebrate this 30th episode, we play a 30 dollar scratch off lottery ticket, have Jimmy come by to talk about people who "sad post" online, a ten list of movies that have the most amount of the word "F**k" in them and a lot more!Enjoy!

Johnny Kielbasa's Sausage Hut
SH141: NFL Schedule and The Seven Dirty Words With Mishy!

Johnny Kielbasa's Sausage Hut

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 17, 2019 49:33


nfl schedule mishy seven dirty words
Tech Policy Podcast
#237: Prodigal Son Returns

Tech Policy Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 21, 2018 12:26


Evan Swarztrauber, the Tech Policy Podcast’s original host, returns to discuss the work he’s doing to speed the deployment of 5G wireless networks in his new role as policy advisor to FCC Commissioner Brendan Carr. For more, follow Evan and Twitter, and listen to his new FCC podcast, More than Seven Dirty Words.

More than Seven Dirty Words

How did you first learn about the FCC? Maybe it was the court fight over George Carlin's "Seven Dirty Words." Or maybe it was the fallout from the 2004 Super Bowl halftime show. Or maybe it some other controversy. Whatever it was, there's a lot more to the FCC than the headlines might suggest. This agency has over 1,400 employees and 80 years of history. There's countless untold stories and unsung heroes, and this podcast will bring you those stories. Maybe we'll even achieve the impossible: make telecom interesting. So sit back, relax, and get to know the FCC. (Disclaimer)

The Best of Coast to Coast AM
George Carlin Remembered - Best of Coast to Coast AM - 6/8/18

The Best of Coast to Coast AM

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 9, 2018 11:02


George Carlin's daughter, Kelly Carlin, joins Ian Punnett and discusses her father's historic case against the Supreme Court over his Seven Dirty Words routine. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://news.iheart.com/podcast-advertisers

Ask the Podcast Coach
Talking Dirty

Ask the Podcast Coach

Play Episode Listen Later May 12, 2018 55:33


Today on episode 209 Dave Jackson and Jim Collison are joined by a live chat room to talk about the following subjects Mother's Day is Tomorrow 2:30 Should You Podcast Angry? 8:30 The Seven Dirty Words 11:15 Distorted View Daily 15:15 Should I upload in Mono or Stereo 20:40 Microphone Technique 22:44 voicecon.co 29:48 Thanks to our Awesome Supporters 30:36 Google Search 33:48 sonix.ai Transcription dave has been using Temi.com 40:00 Why are We texting? 42:00 What is the average rate for advertising?   Thanks to all our supporters! Join today at www.askthepodcascoach.com/awesome

T is For Training
T is for Training 213 - The Seven Dirty Words of Librarianship

T is For Training

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 13, 2017


We talked about @gcouros 8 characteristics of the innovator's mindset and other riffs off of that including TTWWADI That's The Way We've Always Done It. Usually not a good answer.

training librarianship seven dirty words
DBSAlliance
Seven Dirty Words

DBSAlliance

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 3, 2014 26:44


Certain words and phrases used by doctors and providers simply set many consumer's teeth on edge. So says DBSA's Director of Training Matt Mattson, who talks about "The Seven Dirty Words" that hinder patient/provider partnerships.

seven dirty words
Caustic Soda
Censorship

Caustic Soda

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 18, 2012


Live from the Roundhouse Community Centre and the Vancouver Comic Arts Festival, Toren, Joe, and Kevin are joined by Cinema Sewer's Robin Bougie to talk about censorship. Book burnings, the Seven Dirty Words, the Danish Mohammed cartoons, Elvis' pelvis, and more! Music: "Shaving Cream" by Benny Bell Images Links Cinema Sewer Tubgirl (NSFW, NSFL) Hays Code Charities of the Week: Comic Book Legal Defense Fund (USA) Comic Legends Legal Defense Fund (Canada) Videos http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mLSgqH2BOeg http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WXMzEdXpvPw Notes MPAA Film Board members are supposed to have children between the ages of 5 and 17. We had a segment about an Oxford Library burning, but on further research we believe that to have been an error so it was edited out. We'll try to find more information if we can.

music live elvis censorship toren shaving cream seven dirty words cinema sewer robin bougie
The Lazy Geeks
The Lazy Geeks: Seven Dirty Words And Then Some

The Lazy Geeks

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 16, 2012 97:07


Welcome to The Lazy Geeks Podcast, here on the Lazy Geeks Network. This is our weekly podcast discussing the biggest news from the previous week for the week of January 10, 2012. Random Roundtable – Supreme Court Reviewing The "7 Words You Can't Say On TV" Anonymous Releases Info of Media Supporting SOPA and White House Won't Support SOPA Lady Sif Is Returning For Thor 2 (Jamie Alexander) Comic Con 2012 Membership ID Registration Has Begun News – Sapien:Bethesda takes another crack at fixing PS3 Skyrim issues Nomad: DICE Really Hates Cheaters Sapien:OnLive Coming to Google TV Devices Nomad: Samsung Wants More Battery Life For You Too Sapien:Happy Birthday DC Universe Online Nomad: DC Cancels Six Titles, But Adds Six Main Topics – Best, Meh and Worst of CES 2011 Wanna Donate to our Beer Fund: Donate to our PayPal Venmo: @thelazygeeks_1010 Contact Us: Blog: https://thelazygeeks.com/ Email: themailbag@thelazygeeks.com Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/thelazygeeks/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/thelazygeeks Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thelazygeeks/ YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/c/Thelazygeeks --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/thelazygeeks/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/thelazygeeks/support

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