Britcoms too hot for US TV?
03:47 BST, Wednesday 14th July 2004 -- by James Welsh
Are You Being Served? and other British sitcoms might be too hot for US public television.
A report in the Christian Science Monitor quotes the manager of a PBS station in San Diego as saying that bawdy Britcoms which "thrive on double entendre" cause worries about whether the station is "on thin ice" while the American media regulator, the FCC, is trying to clamp down on indecency.
The report indicates that PBS have started bleeping expletives out of various shows in its lineup, including Prime Suspect.
lol.
What is the world coming to?
Cheap, badly-made but innocent comedy series is now seen as too much for the clearly sensitive American pallet.
I can't believe that a programme made when its originators still pretty much thought that flashing a bit of ankle was out of order is too risky to show on public television!
For comparison, Channel Four (a state-owned commercial-revenue terrestrial network in the UK) will be showing the uncut version of Baise Moi later this year, having already done so on their satellite film channel recently.
America really needs to get a grip of its religious nutters -- this is hilarious.