In the United States , is the name traditionally given to the department at a Television Network which is responsible for the "moral", ethical, and legal implications of the program that network airs—in the vernacular, "the censors". They also ensure fairness on television game shows, acting as an adjunct to the judges at the production company level.
- Episode 97 of '' Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (2003) '' has yet to be shown in the United States due to pressures from Fox Broadcast & Standards. On the official TMNT website Lloyd Goldfine states:
- The final three episodes of the first season of '' Moral Orel '' were held back for various amounts of time by Standards and Practices, the episode entitled "God's Chef" being delayed for months before the Adult Swim network was able to show it.
- was very heavily influenced by BS&P. Unlike the comic book, characters were rarely ever in any danger and characters almost never hit each other directly. A few excerpts from BS&P on the show:
- The retirement of , a Price Is Right pricing game, came in 1996 following a complaint from a contestant over the omission of a particular rule. After talking it over with Standards and Practices, the production staff awarded her the prize.
Many television programs (especially cartoons) have parodied the existence of Standards and Practices departments.
- One episode of the '' Beetlejuice '' cartoon featured the cast being harassed by Goody Two-Shoes, a Fairy Godmother -like media watchdog from the "Bureau of Sweetness and Prissiness" (BS&P, a knock at ABC 's Broadcast Standards and Practices) who wanted them to clean up their act. The end of the episode also brings attention the show's own censoring, as Beetlejuice's complains about the camera always cutting away to a disgusted character's reaction of him whenever he eats bugs. A later episode also referenced this practice, where Beetlejuice is forced by Lydia to discourage a young boy from acting like him.
- The television show '' ReBoot '' also featured several jabs at ABC's Broadcast Standards & Practices department. In "The Quick & The Fed", Bob uses a command called "BS&P" to teleport through a window (according to the producers, Standards had nixed the idea of Bob breaking the window with a rock). "In the Belly of the Beast" featured Enzo firing a gun with the words "BS&P approved" on it that shoots rubber life rafts. "Talent Night" featured a "prog censor" named Emma Fee who kept complaining about objectionable content in the acts Dot wanted, and a group called " The Small Town Binomes " singing a song called "BS'n'P".
- In the '' Ed, Edd N Eddy '' episode "Ed Overboard", Eddy is sworn in as a temporary member of Rolf's "Urban Rangers", and quips "I'd swear, but Standards won't let me."
- In one episode of the Anime '' Fushigi Yūgi '', part of a test to see if main character Miaka is worthy of receiving a magical artifact requires her to take her clothes off. She strips down to a one-piece undergarment, and explains she cannot take it off because "This is the limit of what the broadcast code allows."
- In the Cartoon Network series '' Aqua Teen Hunger Force '', during the episode " Gee Whiz ", the show makes reference to CN's Standards & Practices department, referring to it as "A vital link in keeping good and funny ideas away from you, the television viewer." It then demonstrates its purpose with a series of otherwise offensive material and places it into context against humorously inoffensive material (for example, showing a nun being decapitated with blood gushing out as unacceptable, but that same nun being decapitated with a rainbow coming out as acceptable). They are also not allowed say Jesus , but are to use "Gee Whiz" instead.
- In the '' South Park '' episode " It Hits The Fan ", the frozen knights enlisted to prevent the uttering of the "words of Curse" are called the Knights of Standards and Practices.
- In '' Sealab 2021 '', one Fourth-wall breaking episode has the characters all engaging in incredibly dangerous or deplorable activities. In one scene, a character flashes a series of helicopters, causing another helicopter to appear, claiming that it is from Turner Standards and Practices. It tells her to "put your breasts back in your shirt, you dirty whore!" even though her breasts are blurred out.
- On Adult Swim , one bump calls Standards and Practices "where funny goes to die".
- In '''' When the ailen is cutting the web off of Mindy she say "Hey, Hey!" "Are you nuts?" and the ailen stands there and Mindy says "Duh! Standards and Practices."
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