Nudity in American television has always
been a controversial topic. Aside from a few exceptions, nudity has
traditionally not been shown on
terrestrial television. On the other
hand,
cable television is much less
restrictive as far as nudity is concerned.
History
Public Broadcasting
Service, which features nudity in anthropological documentaries
as well as some films, was the first network to display national
programming that featured frontal female nudity on
television.
Throughout
the United
States
, many metropolitan areas had independent television
stations that were not affiliated with any of the national networks
and showed programming only to people within their limited
broadcast range. During the 1980s, many of these stations
experimented with showing frontal female nudity in movies during
the prime time hour.
KTLA
in Los
Angeles, for example, showed an unedited version of Academy Award-winning One Flew Over the
Cuckoo's Nest, which features fully exposed female
breasts, between 7:30 and 11 p.m. The channel began the time
slot with a video of director
Milos
Forman stating that the film was too controversial to be
allowed a faithful television broadcast (NBC's earlier broadcast
had cut the film to fit the two hours format with commercials), but
that KTLA believed that the culture had changed such that a
complete broadcast would be tolerated and appreciated. Then, it was
followed by a disclaimer that was repeated after each commercial
break.
KTVU
in the
San Francisco
Bay Area
regularly showed uncensored films that contained
nudity, such as Magnum Force
(Suzanne Somers), Big Bad Mama (Angie Dickinson and William Shatner), and Walkabout, which features full frontal
nudity in a scene with teenage actress Jenny Agutter skinny dipping.
A number of stations in this era even went so far as to run
promotions during which they would show a series of movies known
for nudity in an attempt to get higher ratings for the week. In
almost all cases, the nudity was restricted to showing exposed
buttocks and female breasts.
By the end of the 1980s, most of these stations had started to
receive complaints about such nudity and these broadcasts
eventually stopped. In addition, some of these stations became
Fox affiliates and were no
longer able to make independent programming decisions during
prime time.
From early 1990s until mid-2000s, some primetime series (such as
ABC's
NYPD Blue and
Once and Again ,
CBS's
Chicago Hope
and
Fox's
John Doe) experimented with
nudity.
NYPD Blue is noteworthy for featuring nudity in
the context of people engaging in sexual activity. While fully
exposed female breasts were never shown, the show often depicted
full back nudity of men and women, usually in darkened rooms.
In 1997,
NBC broadcast an unedited version of
Steven Spielberg's
holocaust movie
Schindler's List in
prime time. The film features brief full-frontal
nudity of both sexes in non-sexual contexts. Then-congressman
Tom Coburn criticized NBC's airing of the
film for its nudity, violence and profanity. Both Democrats and
Coburn's fellow Republicans criticized Coburn for his reaction, and
defended the film and NBC's choice to air it in full. Coburn
subsequently apologized for his reaction.
Current status
After
Justin Timberlake exposed
Janet Jackson's breast during a live
performance at the
Super Bowl
XXXVIII halftime
show, a
moral panic occurred, and
the
Federal
Communications Commission (FCC) tightened its indecency rules
due to public pressure. As an instant result of the scandal, major
networks edited some of their shows.
CBS removed
a shot of a naked man from
Without a
Trace, while
NBC deleted a two-second
shot of an elderly woman's breast from
ER . Subsequently, prime time television
networks became more reluctant to show even non-explicit nudity in
their TV shows. In the current climate, nudity is almost unknown on
any
broadcast television show -
with the exception being
animated
series such as
The
Simpsons and
Family Guy
(which spoofed the conservative phase of American television in the
episode "
PTV").
Cable television, on the other hand, is not bound by FCC rules and
can show whatever material their executives think is suitable.
While cable channels that rely on advertising still do not show
nudity during primetime hours, nudity is often shown on
premium cable channels such as
Showtime and
HBO.
FX is one of the few commercially dependent
cable channels that features nudity in its programming (notably the
controversial
Nip/Tuck).
Discovery and other
documentary-related channels may show
nudity in a journalistic context, such as that of
indigenous people.
It can also be noted that, while nudity practically disappeared
from network television, a
Kaiser Family Foundation study of
sex on television released in November 2005 proved that TV
characters are having sex twice as often as they were in 1998. The
study examined more than 1,000 hours of programming.
References
- "NYPD Blue" (1993) - Trivia
- "Chicago Hope" (1994) - Trivia
- "After rebuke, congressman apologizes for
'Schindler's List' remarks", CNN.com, February 26, 1997.
Accessed April 05, 2008.
- "American TV pushes nudity off the schedule",
Taipei
Times, February 16, 2004
See also
External links