Aaron Johnson

That is his hole. There are brighter and better shots out there but you can clearly see his pink shaved asshole.

o_O Y'all either have really good eyes or really good imagination lol because I can't see a hole there...
 
o_O Y'all either have really good eyes or really good imagination lol because I can't see a hole there...
Exactly he just got an imagination, there’s no way a film like this is gonna show an actual hole. It’s one of the three things that can’t be shown on a movie
 
Exactly he just got an imagination, there’s no way a film like this is gonna show an actual hole. It’s one of the three things that can’t be shown on a movie

What are the other two? :eek:
 
Can’t show an asshole, an erect dick, or a full pussy shot.
Actually, in the US there are no rules against showing any of those things except on over-air broadcast networks (ABC,CBS,NBC,FOX, and CW) where the FCC can fine them. Most basic cable channels self censor to keep advertising revenue but if you pay for access they can show whatever the want. We've just become conditioned to them being censored and think it's the law. It can affect the ratings on theatrical releases but once the film gets a mature rating then they can pretty much show what they want. Theaters may choose not to show it based on local ordinances and wanting to make revenue but there are no federal regulations. Things have got more conservative but OZ showed all three of those things 20 years ago.
 
Actually, in the US there are no rules against showing any of those things except on over-air broadcast networks (ABC,CBS,NBC,FOX, and CW) where the FCC can fine them. Most basic cable channels self censor to keep advertising revenue but if you pay for access they can show whatever the want. We've just become conditioned to them being censored and think it's the law. It can affect the ratings on theatrical releases but once the film gets a mature rating then they can pretty much show what they want. Theaters may choose not to show it based on local ordinances and wanting to make revenue but there are no federal regulations. Things have got more conservative but OZ showed all three of those things 20 years ago.

I suppose that would explain this entire thread (unsimulated) lol. Thanks for the info guys!
 
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Actually, in the US there are no rules against showing any of those things except on over-air broadcast networks (ABC,CBS,NBC,FOX, and CW) where the FCC can fine them. Most basic cable channels self censor to keep advertising revenue but if you pay for access they can show whatever the want. We've just become conditioned to them being censored and think it's the law. It can affect the ratings on theatrical releases but once the film gets a mature rating then they can pretty much show what they want. Theaters may choose not to show it based on local ordinances and wanting to make revenue but there are no federal regulations. Things have got more conservative but OZ showed all three of those things 20 years ago.
I don’t remember an erect dick on OZ lol, there’s certain things that would make a movie rise to NC17 rating and those are it, and no movie company wants that rating.
 
I don’t remember an erect dick on OZ lol, there’s certain things that would make a movie rise to NC17 rating and those are it, and no movie company wants that rating.

You didn't say anything about a rating. You said they can't show it.

Movie ratings are almost completely arbitrary. The Passion of The Christ was rated NC17 originally for violence. Clerks was originally rated NC17 for graphic language. Braveheart and American Pie were both rated NC17. They went in and shaved a few seconds of violence, language, or nudity and got an R.

It's a tactic that many directors employ now. They know they have to give the MPAA something to critique them on so they put in 45 seconds of violence or nudity when they know they are going to cut it down to 30. They film a scene where someone uses profanity 30 times and the same scene with only 15 expletives. Switch them out and get a better rating. Then they get to release an UNCUT version for home media.

Ratings are just a ridiculous racket. They also don't mean much to most people. Churches and schools took busloads of minors to see The Passion of The Christ with an R rating. Millions of parents took their children to see Deadpool when it was clearly an R rated movie.

The reality is that they can show whatever they want in a film. It's just going to affect their ability to secure screens and make money. Only 5 R rated movies have ever made over 300 million dollars. Most R-rated movies are considered successful if they make over 100 million.