Friday, January 17, 2014

Weekend Discussion: Censorship, the Plague (Revisited)

Anthony Comstock, Father of Modern Censorship

Note: This is a revised version of the article published here about a year ago.

What's the Point?

We complain about it all the time among ourselves. We should be complaining to the networks about this.

About eight years ago I heard this subject covered on Anderson Cooper's program in which comments were made about the body heat being generated before Mexican and other Hispanic TV cameras on our favorite shows. The news team was wondering why the English-language networks were being raked over the coals and submitted to the rack to censor programs of this salacious material while the Univisions and Telemundos were being left alone. No answer was forthcoming and I don't recall them taking the subject very seriously, but I took this seriously enough to call a VP at Univision to let her know about it. I found the transcript of the broadcast online and sent the link to her with a cover note. After she read the page she let me know that nothing is going to interfere with the content of the programs. No te preocupes.


However, what she couldn't predict at that moment has happened: Gringos are getting interested in these programs to the degree that overall ratings are being affected. The U.S. Broadcast of the finale of Alborada in 2005 was the highest-rated television program in the country in any language. That's a combination of a number of factors:

  • Growth of the Hispanic audience
  • Friday night tends to be a sleeper time slot for English-language television
  • Fewer Spanish-language networks means less fragmentation among the perceived potential viewers
  • Gringos are getting more interested in telenovelas because of the exciting stories and hot actors. For Univision and Telemundo, those viewers are more salsa on the taco.

So... it's possible that the moral watchdogs in the U.S. have decided to attack these programs or the networks themselves are trying to head this off at the pass.

In recent times we have seen several examples of silly edits in love scenes that make no sense to those of us who have seen the entire scenes in their previous broadcasts. In La Que No Podia Amar there were edits in love scenes of the protagonists that eliminated views of Ana Brenda Contreras' bare back and the same thing happened in the two series that followed it, Amor Bravío and Qué Bonito Amor. This week we've had a real butchering of the key love scene of Lo Que La Vida Me Robó.

The first three examples aired in the 10PM time slot, the last at 9PM. Perhaps Lo Que La Vida Me Robó should be in the 10PM slot, but history has made 8 and 9PM the ratings core of Univision.

We've seen more recent examples that make just as little sense as these. This is not likely to stop until and unless the public starts objecting very loudly. This is an insult to our intelligence and maturity. If novela audiences are aging – as Televisa's production decisions imply – there is no good reason to take the scissors to film and videotape.


Sound off, amigos.

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Comments:
A perfect topic to revisit.

I think this may have been said in the original discussion, but I am bothered by the fact that LOVE scenes will be edited while GUN VIOLENCE is not.
 

Amen, Sara. And other kinds of violent scenes as well, but I find gun violence especially hard to take.

Why don't they put the advisory at the beginning of the episode like some other shows have when the content is going have more skin/suggestive language than normal? Rather than hacking to bits scenes that were at most PG-13 in the first place?
 

Heeey, yeah! Why *aren't* there ratings at the beginning and when coming back from commercial breaks (are there and I'm not paying attention?)

Well, now I'm mad. There is no reason to censor if there's a warning.
 

I haven't seen it on a telenovela, but I have for shows on other networks.
 

I just saw a TV14 D label on MPV.
 

The TV-14-SLD rating, while unused by these loonies, exist. One episode of Telemundo's "Marido" had that rating so I don't get why Uni doesn't use it. Also, wth is TV-14-VL?? Why TV-14-VD retired?

I want to point out that ratings have nothing to do with Uni's decision to use scissors to cut love scenes. MPV had plenty of love scenes cut, even the rape scene that was important. But that novela, while a high quality production, had the worst ratings at 10pm, averaging 2.5 million viewers or less weekly. Why do you think Uni moved it to 7pm?

Also, Amores had better ratings than Abismo, yet the edits weren't that severe. Sure, the love scenes were altered, but they kept some of them instead of axing EVERYTHING. For the latter, yes the edits were awful and the ratings were mediocre, but better than TalisMAL at least. All the love scenes with the protagonists and co-stars were cut, even that tawdry hotel scene with Sabrina and Paolo. As for La que no podia amar, top rated novela at 10pm and all love scenes were cut. They either choose to cut love scenes or condense them, regardless if said novela is a hit or flop. Plus, Uni's prime time lineup have terrible ratings now. Just saying.
 

Uni only uses these:

TV-PG-D
TV-PG-VD
TV-PG-LD
TV-PG-VLD
TV-PG-VSD (used only once for one episode of LRDG, but a few movies on Unimas carry this rating)

TV-14-D
TV-14-VL (Replaced VD)
TV-14-SD
TV-14-LD
TV-14-VSD
TV-14-VSL (used only once for one episode of LRDG)
TV-14-VSLD
 

They are probably also cutting for more commercial time. During QBA when they compressed episodes into 1.5 episodes per night they had only one commercial break in the middle. Most viewers probably liked that, but the advertisers whose spots ran may not have liked it so much because of the premium rates they would have paid for them.

Some cuts are very arbitrary and that series also suffered the cutting of a scene or two that had key information. However, that was one evening. There was another evening with substantial cuts of "filler" material.

However, it's high time we got out of our Victorian mindset as a country. It really annoys me that sex is still such a forbidden subject here.
 

Urban, do you think that Univision is more or less transparent than the other major networks?

Does Univision have an office where complaints/questions can be submitted?

Have you had any experience recently in dealing with this type of department at Univision?

Do you think that Univision is even aware of our complaints/questions/concerns? I suspect that we are not the only ones wondering what the hey is going on here.

How does one make one's voice heard in order to effect change?

Fatima

P.S. I think we might be in danger of falling off the front page because one of the recaps doesn't have the usual page break.
 

Interesting conversation, UA, thanks for reposting. I don't have much to add because of a lack of behind-the-scenes knowledge.

I have heard that certain actresses (Ana Brenda, for one) do not want explicit love scenes and it's in their contract. There are American actresses who do the same and if the director wants something steamy, we know they use doubles--just to make us think the main protagonist is doing the deed.

Silvia Navarro is one who doesn't shy away from acting in her own sexual encounters or showing plenty of skin, when it's tastefully filmed. In this case it's what whoever wields the scissors that makes the decision of when and where to edit that is to blame for what the public gets to see.

I concur, thank goodness for on-line sites where we can get whole scenes, especially where the cut scenes are central to moving the story forward.

 

Just saw that martaivett put in the page break, so we should remain on the front page for awhile. :))

Fatima
 

Anita

There are also male actors in American TV who have restrictions on love scenes because of their religious beliefs or respect for their mates.

I agree with the why cut love scenes when violence gets to play out in horrific detail. LP was appalling violent and rape scenes was certainly not cut, actually rapes are almost never cut. LP also had a scene with a male actor and we almost saw everything he had to offer. Except in the old NYPD Blue days where we saw male rumps I've never seen anything close to the LP one.

It is odd that there is all this chopping of love scenes when in daytimes soaps presumably when children are around there are/were plenty of them.

I also find myself annoyed with bleeping. I guess full on Spanish speakers would get what is being said but we poor gringos are missing an opportunity to expand our vocabularies. LOL
 

I remember that. The early episodes had one break as the combined episodes ran 58-59 minutes. Afterwards, the modified episodes ran 54-55 minutes with two breaks and some scenes were axed out.
 

I agree with the commenters who wonder why violence isn't cut and consensual sex is. We don't really need to see beatings or rapes to know what happened. Sometimes either the writers or editors seem to get this though, recently on Cachito de cielo the character Mara was raped and they didn't show any of it and I was actually relieved because what they did show made me cringe anyway. Mujer de Vendaval had a rape too and didn't show much of it.
I don't know if originally there were scenes that got cut because it was re-aired during the day or whether the writers just realized it wasn't necessary or what.

Just writing this made me realize that nearly every telenovela has at least one rape and multiple acts of violence toward women. WHY? I mean I know it happens in real life but these are supposed to be fantasies. Why so dark and disturbing?
 

Fatima, I don't know. I don't write Spanish well enough to participate on Univision's message boards and I have been out of work for quite a while. If I were doing business with them right now I'd ask.

Check their website and see if you can write e-mails to them. I don't know if they will take an e-mail in English seriously, though.

Sneaky Two Shoes, I have a real problem with the showing of rape but not consensual sex. The issue beyond that is how the rape is shown.

If they're going to get explicit about rape I'd rather they show it in all the ugliest the actors are capable of displaying. I certainly don't want it eroticized or toned down. It's a subject people often have problems getting real about.

It is still a crime, however, to curtail scenes of consensual sex when it can be given the glory it deserves.
 

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