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Let’s Be Heroes creator Ian Jones-Quartey pointed out how one of his series’ characters was allowed to appear on the hood of a moving car of the Cartoon Network series as long as he was wearing a seatbelt.
In response to a 2021 Twitter thread of industry workers pointing out the baffling and even comical things S&P departments had flagged within projects they worked on, OK K.O. Hirsh is not the first animation creative to discuss the sometimes strange requests and censoring that can come out of a network’s S&P department. “(Note, ‘tip’ sometimes refers to the tip of a penis. “Brother this is the TIP of the iceberg,” he writes. In a follow-up tweet to the video, Hirsch responds to one person by declaring that the contents of the video are only the “tip” of the iceberg, before revealing how even the show’s use of that word was reviewed. He then ended it with a single question: “Why should we be held hostage to any imaginary knee-jerk career complainer who could conceivably go out of their way to pretend to be offended by this?” It also asked Hirsch and the show’s writing team to edit or remove the use of Lucifer and Holy Christmas on the grounds they may be religiously offensive, the former of which produced a rather lengthy response from the animation creative, who currently executive produces Inside Job at Netflix. As noted in previous concerns, their affectionate relationship should remain comical versus flirtatious.” When it came to the duo, Sheriff Daryl Blubs and Deputy Durland, the Gravity Falls team was asked to “Please revise the action of Blubs putting his arm around Durland. (Notably, in 2021, he criticized Disney on social media for selling Pride-related products while censoring LGBTQ representation in its shows.) They also touched on cultural offensiveness or the representation of the show’s gay couple, which Hirsh has previously on several occasions publicly discussed having to fight to show. There’s even a note about a character dressing as a teddy bear being potentially problematic as “it may call to mind the people who dress up as stuffed animals as a ‘furry’ fetish.”Ĭontent flags weren’t just about potential sexual innuendos a younger audience might not understand either. According to the request, “chub has a sexual connotation” - an edit for which Hirsch did offer suggested alternatives after pointing out it was referencing a dog’s stature. That includes the use of crud for having an “inappropriate slang definition” and “chub,” which appeared on a character’s “chub pup” t-shirt. The video features a number of notes related to adult understandings of terms or concepts applied within the context of a children’s show. You are not prepared #10YearsOfGravityFalls /EioKU8gIJJ Ever curious about the fights I had with the censors on Gravity Falls? I probably shouldn't share this buttttt here are some REAL NOTES from DISNEY S&P and my REAL REPLIES. The context is an owl-themed restaurant called Hoo-Ha’s Jamboree. As for “hoo-ha,” he wrote, “It is a proper word meaning excitement or hullabaloo and that is clearly its meaning here. Hirsch responded to the initial edit by dismissing that any child watching would find the term “poop face” offensive. “Please revise poop face as it comes across as a replacement for ‘shitface.’ Prior use of Mabel saying ‘poop, poop and butts’ in the episode ‘Fight Fighters’ came across as more childlike and not as offensive,” the narrated S&P note says, before another states, “It has come to our attention that ‘hoo-ha’ is a slang term for vagina. That includes one about the use of the word “poop face” and the word “hoo-ha.”
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The video begins with the message: “The following are real emails from the Disney TV standards and practices department.” It then rolls right into the requested edits, featuring exact page numbers and dates going back to September 2011, which Hirsch refused to make or challenged. Annecy: Netflix Animation Debuts New Footage From Filmmakers Including Henry Selick and Jordan Peele