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Raw
Raw: Gwen Stefani's "Hollaback Girl" features cheerleader chants filled with four-letter words.
(Lawrence K. Ho / LAT)
Is eight enough?
December 8, 2005
Living up to the Legend
December 9, 2005

Censor already flexing finger for best record acts

All five record-of-the-year nominees are sprinkled with raw lyrics — enough to keep CBS-TV execs sweating.
By Randy Lewis, Times Staff Writer
December 9, 2005

Say what?

The N-word, the F-word ... talk about having to keep your finger on the "bleep" button.

All five record-of-the-year nominees are sprinkled with raw lyrics — enough to keep the Recording Academy and CBS-TV execs sweating as much as the artists, especially since all five songs would typically be performed during the live Feb. 8 telecast.

Here's what the censors are up against: Kanye West's "Gold Digger" repeatedly uses the N-word in its sing-along refrain and the F-word turns up in Green Day's "Boulevard of Broken Dreams," as it did in the group's "American Idiot," nominated in the same category last year. Well aware of the political incorrectness of his song, West has even joked on his current concert tour that it was OK for whites in his audience to use the N-word if they wanted to rap along.

And then there's Gwen Stefani's "Hollaback Girl," with its cheerleader chants filled with four-letter words. The Gorillaz "Feel Good Inc.," the tamest of the lot, includes the three-letter word for donkey. Even Mariah Carey wonders "where the hell I went wrong" in "We Belong Together."

Ratings? Decency? Ratings? Decency? What's a network to do?



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