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Television rating system

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A television rating system is a method of giving television viewers an idea of the suitability of a television program for children and/or adults.

United States

The TV Parental Guidelines system was introduced on January 1, 1996 in the United States in response to public complaints of increasingly explicit sexual content, graphic violence and strong profanity in television programs. It was established by the Federal Communications Commission as a voluntary-participation system, with ratings to be determined by the individually-participating broadcast and cable networks. It was specifically designed to be used with the V-chip, which was mandated to be built into all television sets manufactured after 2000, but the guidelines themselves have no legal force.

The system does not apply to documentary, news or sports programming, or commercials.

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right right right For the first 15 seconds of every rated program lasting a half-hour or less, a large rating icon appears in the upper-left hand corner of the TV screen. For every rated program running an hour or longer, a rating appears in the upper-left hand corner of the TV screen at the beginning of each half hour.

Starting in mid 2005, many networks display the icons after every commercial break. ABC was one of the first television networks to display the program's rating after every commercial break in addition to at the beginning of the program. CBS and UPN only show the icon at the start of the program, and uses the original smaller icons. On Fox networks, the ratings icons are colored blue/white and larger than the voluntary specifications and appears at the start of the program and always on the half hour and hour. The black and white versions are retained for animated programs. The icons also appeared after commercial breaks, but this practice seems to be infrequent as of Spring 2006. Also, NBC, PBS, and their related cable networks did not use the DSLV subratings until 2005. [link] [link]

Locally-produced programming may not show any kind of icon or indicator for a rating, and it is extremely rare for public access cable channels to have any ratings. News and sports channels (such as CNN, CNBC, Fox News Channel, ESPN, and Fox Sports Net), and broadcast news and sports shows have never used the ratings system, as live and taped sports and news events are excluded from having to be rated, though the commitments by the networks to edit out any live profanity and obscenity does remain.

The ratings can be detected by a television set device known as a V-chip. V-chips are built into all television receivers manufactured since 2000. Older sets can be retrofitted with external set-top boxes. However, the V-chips have to be activated by the set's owner, and provide only a blanket blocking for programs displaying the owner-selected primary rating(s): subratings cannot usually be selected for exemption from V-chip blockage (there are some television sets which can block subratings, however).

Some famous exceptions of live programming that got past by the censors were Bono's "This is really, really fucking brilliant" on the Golden Globe Awards; Nicole Richie's "Have you ever tried to clean cow shit out of a Prada purse? It's not so fucking simple," on the Billboard Music Awards; and one of the most infamous scenes in the history of American television, Janet Jackson's exposed breast on the Super Bowl XXXVIII halftime show. Many however have stated that the excessively graphic and brutal violence on shows like C.S.I are far worse than the profanity or nudity that gets attention from the media.#redirect

Canada

In the wake of the American ratings system, the Canadian TV Classification System was created for English-language programmers to use in conjunction with the V-chip. This system differs somewhat from the American version:

Canadian ratings

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French-language broadcasters use the Quebec film ratings system. There are also exemptions to some of the programming.

An E (no rating will appear on screen) is given to most news and sports programs, documentaries, talk shows, music videos and variety programming because they are exempt programs.

Quebec ratings

An E (no rating will appear on screen) is given to exempt programming, in the same classes used for English Canadian programming above.

Mexico

The Mexican TV ratings are similar to the Mexican movie ratings. The only difference is that there is no D rating for the TV rating system. The ratings are as followed:

Reportedly, only one channel in Mexico explicitly shows the classification on each program, XEIMT-TV in Mexico City.

Australia and New Zealand

For details on the Video and DVD classification system in Australia, see Censorship in Australia.
Australia and New Zealand's rating systems differ only slightly from other rating systems. New Zealand's are based on Australia's previous system which was used before 1995. TV Networks are required by law to warn viewers of a rating of a Program over the M Rating before viewing the programme and required to show a list of subratings the television show specifically may contain (if any). There is also advertising restrictions on TV programs with a rating of MA15+ or Higher. These ratings are exactly the same for Subscription TV. After commercial breaks the rating and subrating abbreviation of the programme has to be shown by law.

Australia

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Ratings from PG upwards can sometimes be accompanied with any of the specific subratings. These can be classified as "mild", "some", "very", "frequent", "realistic" or "strong", depending on the content of the television program. These subratings are:

New Zealand

G (General Programmes): These exclude material likely to harm children under 14 and can screen at any time. Programmes may not necessarily be designed for younger viewers, but must not contain material likely to cause them undue distress or discomfort. G-rated programmes can screen at any time.

PGR (Parental Guidance Recommended): Programmes more suited to more mature viewers. These are not necessarily unsuitable for children, but viewer discretion is advised, and parents and guardians are encouraged to supervise younger viewers. Programmes rated PRG can screen between 9 a.m. - 4 p.m. and between 7 p.m. - 6 a.m..

AO (Adults Only): AO programmes contain material of an adult nature handled in such a way that it is unsuitable for children. Such programmes are directed primarily at a mature audience and can screen between noon and 3 p.m. on a school day (except during school and public holidays as designated by the Ministry of Education), and between 8:30 p.m. - 5 a.m.. Some programmes exceed the guidelines and have special notes like AO 9:30 p.m. or later when sexually related body parts and/or situations might appear.

United Kingdom

BBFC: U PG 12A 12 15 18 PEGI: 3+ 7+ 12+ 16+ 18+
For details on the video and DVD classification system in the UK, see British Board of Film Classification.
In the United Kingdom, TV ratings are usually considered unnecessary; the television regulator, Ofcom, sets clear boundaries for what can be shown and when. The most obvious example of this is in the watershed, the time at which more explicit content can be shown. On main broadcast television, this is 9 p.m., however on subscriber television services it is 8 p.m..

However, some channels have adopted their own systems.

Also of note, the WWE Friday Night SmackDown! show shown on Sky Sports 3 retains America's TV-PG rating, and shows the logo in the top corner, even though the announcement made by Sky before every broadcast contradicts this.

Ireland

In Ireland, RTÉ displays a banner in the top left-hand corner of the screen during the opening screen of a programme. The banner will display either -

This only applies to the RTÉ channels (RTÉ One, RTÉ Two & TG4), other television channels would usually make a verbal announcement of what a show contains beforehand.

Poland

Until August 2005, Poland's television ratings system consisted of three icons:

The current Polish television rating system, instituted in August 2005, consists of five icons:

Icons are seen continuously during movies and TV programs (except commercials). Informative programs, sports and commercials are exempt from classification.

Netherlands

The Netherlands have a project called Kijkwijzer (ViewingGuide) introduced in 2002 by the Dutch Institute for the Classification of Audiovisual Media (NICAM). Kijkwijzer advices parents through graphic icons about almost all TV programs, movies and DVDs in the Netherlands. Recently their advice has begun expanding into gaming and the internet. When a movie is rated 12, this does not mean you are not allowed to see the movie under 12. It simply means that the parent should be aware that not all children under 12 might be able to cope with the content of the movie. It is up to the parent to decide if their child is mature enough to watch the movie or TV program. The icons are shown in TV guides, on movie posters, at the start of movies in theatre, and in the top left corner when a TV program starts.

What is special about these ratings is that there is no official written alternative for icons. Also short animated versions of the icons which even feature short audio samples are often used in commercials and the internet.

The following icons are in use for age rating:

These icons can be accompanied by any of the following subratings

South Africa

South African ratings are regulated by the Film and Publication Board. All television stations, cinemas and distributers of DVD, video and computer games must display the following signage:

(The 18 rating does not refer to adult, child or animal pornography - as this is banned from television and cinema by the Film and Publication Board)

(The R18 rating does not refer to child or animal pornography - as this is totally banned by the Film and Publication Board)

additional symbols:

Other countries

Satire of the Rating System

During the opening sequence of The Simpsons Treehouse of Horror VIII, the FOX censor edits the show, trying to avoid "raunchy NBC-style sex, or senseless CBS-style violence." A rating symbol hovers behind the censor and stabs him in the back with a sword, each time changing its ratings until it goes beyond "TV-MA" and becomes "TV-666."

During the Harvey Birdman, Attorney At Law episode The Devlin Made Me Do It, the complexity of the rating system is parodied as Birdman aggressively questions a small child on how easy it is to follow: "Bobby, isn't television safe for the good kids? The ones who go to bed on time and don't file frivolous lawsuits. The kids who understand our simple voluntary TV rating system. TV-Y! TV-Y7! TV-Y7 FV for fantasy violence! How much clearer can we make it, Bobby?"

See also

External links

References

 


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