Nudity in American television

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Nudity on American network television has traditionally been a charged topic. Nudity has gained wider acceptance in European television. In contrast to their American counterparts, viewers in Europe perceive nudity and sexuality as less objectionable than the depiction of violence.

In the early days of American television, PBS was the only network to feature mild nudity on its documentaries and films. But starting in the 1990s, some prime-time series (such as ABC's NYPD Blue, CBS's Chicago Hope and FOX's John Doe) featured some mild and relatively inoffensive nude scenes.

After Justin Timberlake exposed Janet Jackson's breast during a live performance at the Super Bowl XXXVIII halftime show which was seen by over 40 million American families, it incited a moral panic, and the Federal Communications Commission tightened its indecency rules due to public pressure. While Americans wrote thousands of letters to the FCC, only fifty Canadians complained about the incident to the Canadian Broadcast Standards Council. [1]

Nudity thus disappeared from most prime-time shows on broadcast television, except for some late-night documentaries or news programs in which the nudity was presented in a "natural" or spontaneous context; e.g., a report about the indigenous peoples of the Americas, breastfeeding or breast cancer.

In contrast to broadcast television, cable is not bound by FCC rules. Cable channels can air shows with whatever material their executives think is suitable. Nudity and sex are shown at differing levels (at least as far as full-frontal nude scenes are concerned). Showtime, HBO and, more recently, FX are among the cable channels that features nudity in its programming. Discovery and other documentary-related channels may show nudity in a "natural" 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 of 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.

Family Guy spoofed this conservative phase of the American network television in the polemic Emmy Award-nominated episode PTV, aired November 6, 2005. While Brian, Peter and Stewie sang the "FCC Song", scenes of them in the nude were shown.


[edit] Chronology

  • 1963: CBS aired the The Beverly Hillbillies episode "Jethro's Friend," which included a scene of a 12 year old boy's bare bottom exposed after his bathing suit falls off in the pool.
  • 1973: PBS aired Steambath on the night of May 4 as part of the Hollywood Television Theater series. On this made-for-TV movie, actress Valerie Perrine exposed her breasts in a shower scene. Only a few PBS stations carried the film.
  • 1974: While NBC was doing the live broadcast of the 46th Academy Awards ceremony, a man named Robert Opel streaked naked across the stage. NBC cameramen reacted quickly enough to avoid broadcasting full-frontal nudity.
  • 1977: ABC aired the critically-acclaimed miniseries Roots. The show, which told the saga of African slaves in the Southern United States, featured some scenes in which a large number of African-American women were seen topless. This choice was made by the producers to add historical reality to the show.
  • 1986: CBS aired the holocaust uprising miniseries Escape from Sobibor, which contained brief, long-distance shots of nude men and women during extermination scenes.
  • 1988: ABC aired their mini-series adaptation of Herman Wouk's War and Remembrance, which contained nudity during scenes set in Auschwitz and other scenes of Nazi atrocities. This was allowed by the network because it was considered necessary to convey the horror of the holocaust.
  • 1991: NBC aired the children's television show Eerie, Indiana, which included an episode where a young girl magically wished her little brother's clothes away; moments later, a naked boy can be seen outside of a basement window, streaking back to the house.
  • 1996: An episode of David E. Kelley's medical drama Chicago Hope broke a major network TV taboo by showing the breasts of a teenage girl after her character undergoes successful reconstructive surgery. The scene, like Meredith Baxter's, wasn't considered indecent due to the medical context of the scene. Note that Kelley's show was also the first to use the word "shit" on a network TV series.
  • 1997: Steven Spielberg's Schindler's List was broadcast on NBC on the night of February 23 sponsored by Ford Motor Company. Per Spielberg's insistence, the network aired the unedited version of his film. The telecast was the first ever to receive a TV-MA rating under the TV Parental Guidelines that had been established at the beginning of that year. Many Christian groups objected to the film being shown on network television, due to strong scenes of nudity, violence, and the use of vulgar language which weren't edited out for TV airing.
  • 1997-2003: The controversial HBO series Oz premieres on July 12. The show featured many instances of nude actors, generally male. The first episode featured three nude scenes: Beecher is raped by Schillinger, Keane and Ortolani are seen fighting on a shower, and Ortolani is sent to the solitary.
  • 1998: HBO aired Gia, a made for tv movie starring Angelina Jolie. She strips naked and dances for a photographer, and later walks out naked to the elevator in her apartment to ask her girlfriend to come back.
  • 1999: On the second episode of the first season of NBC's Third Watch (entitled "Anywhere but here", aired on September 26, 1999), character Ross Green (played by John Rothman) is briefly seen naked from behind. A prostitute who's friend of Sully handcuffed him naked on his car and stole his wallet. Later, Sully and Davis goes to the location where his car is parked to set Green free.
  • 2000-2005: The American version of Queer as Folk, shown on Showtime, was known for its many instances of nude actors and actresses, starting with a long scene in the first episode depicting a sexual encounter between the characters Brian and Justin.
  • 2002: FOX aired the first episode of John Doe. On the series, Dominic Purcell played the role of a man who woke up naked on the middle of an island, and did not know who he was. Trying to leave the island, he fell into the sea, exposing his buttocks. The scene was repeated in the opening titles for the rest of the series' run.
  • 2003 "Naked Beach Frenzy" is an episode of the Ren & Stimpy Adult Party Cartoon. This episode was never aired on Spike TV on American television but is on the Lost Episodes DVD with 2 others. On the commentary, John K specifically asked Spike TV if he could show the nipples for which they replied "Sure! It's a man's network," so they did. John K also said that the advertisers "freaked out" which is more likely responsible for the episode being pulled from air, not the nipples. John K blames Janet Jackson for this due to her infamous Super Bowl halftime show.
  • 2004: The WB aired the first episode of the fourth season of their hit show Smallville. On this episode, Clark Kent (Tom Welling) returns to Smallville re-programmed as Kal-El. Lois Lane (Erica Durance) finds him naked in a cornfield and takes him to the local hospital. When they get there, Clark drops the towel Lois gave him, exposing the upper part of his buttocks.
  • 2004: ABC premiered their new hit show Desperate Housewives. During the second episode, gardener John Rowland (Jesse Metcalfe) is seen partially (but not explicitly) with his rear naked. Just like Smallville's partial nudity, this was not considered offensive and got past the network censors.
  • 2005: Comedy Central premiered the ninth season of South Park. Live action highlights can be seen during Mr. Garrison's sex change operation. These highlights are actually that of an animal being neutered and was shown completely uncut in the United States.
  • 2006: Blade: The Series, shown on Spike TV, showed the character Chase walking away from the camera. Her nude body was shown from behind.
  • 2007: The Riches, shown on FX, included a nude sex scene with reunited husband and wife, Wayne and Dahlia Malloy; Eddie Izzard's bare backside is seen in the shot.

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