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Kevin Harvick on This Week In Unnecessary Censorship – Video


Kevin Harvick on This Week In Unnecessary Censorship
Kevin Harvick on This Week In Unnecessary Censorship.

By: Armando Toner

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Kevin Harvick on This Week In Unnecessary Censorship - Video

Censorship and the hopeless crusade of social justice – Video


Censorship and the hopeless crusade of social justice
Wherein Hawkeye decrees the pups who think themselves alphas.

By: Lord Hawkeye

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Censorship and the hopeless crusade of social justice - Video

Banned Books Week: Comic Books and Literary Censorship – Video


Banned Books Week: Comic Books and Literary Censorship
"Comic books are being challenged with greater frequency than they ever have been," says Charles Brownstein, executive director of the Comic Book Legal Defen...

By: ReasonTV

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Banned Books Week: Comic Books and Literary Censorship - Video

Reliable Source: Mix the News: What censorship sounds like

Banned Books Weekis drawing to a close, but you still have two more days tocelebratecensorship (or rather, the end thereof).

So for this weeks mix, librarian Tony Ross, of the Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Library in Washington,curated a list of songs (disclaimer: some are explicit) that have been dubbed inappropriate by the powers that be. Some tracks are obvious. Youcould very easily make a list of 60 songs, said Ross, there was a lot that was banned. Profanityor suggestive lyrics are a surefire path to parental advisory sticker. But what about protest songs during Vietnam? Or singers who supported the labor movement? Rapper Eminem vs.former president George W. Bush? All had problems.

As librarians, were all about providing access, explained Ross, not just to books but all kinds of art and experiences.Any time you talk about limited access that raises our hackles.

1. Love For Sale Cole Porteras sung by Billie Holiday

This Cole Porter song written/sung from the perspective of a prostitute is from the 1930 Broadwaymusical The New Yorkers. The original staging had a white actress singing it in front of apopular restaurant of the day, however in response to negative public reaction, the producersrestaged it with a black actress singing it in front of The Cotton Club. Despite its popularity, thesong was banned from radio at the time, as was this later Billie Holiday version.

2. Take Your Hand Off It Billy Hughes

In 1948, the vice mayor and police chief of Memphis agreed that three songs popular on localjukeboxes were obscene. Police rounded up and destroyed about 400 records including thiscountry swing song with its double entendre lyrics. The other songs were Operation Blues byAmos Milburn and Move Your Hand Baby by Count Waterford.

3. The Hammer Song The Weavers In 1950, The Weavers had a No. 1hit with their version of Goodnight Irene and appearedpoised for long-term success. However, the folk quartets ties to the progressive labor movementled to two of them (one was Pete Seeger) being called before the Sen. Joe McCarthysHouse Committee on Un-American Activities. They refused to testify and were summarilyblacklisted and placed under FBI surveillance. Their record label terminated The Weavers contractand refused to sell their records. They were forbidden from playing on the radio or TV,and concert promoters were strongly encouraged not to book them, and with no means tomake a living the group disbanded in 1952. Following the Red Scare, they reformed in variousincarnations, culminating in a famous 1980 concert at Carnegie Hall.

4. Louie, Louie The Kingsmen

Although the song had been recorded by several artists since 1955, you probably are mostfamiliar with this 1963 version. Recorded in a rush under trying conditions with a singer wearingnew braces and unable to fully enunciate, the slurred lyrics engendered an countrywide urbanlegend that there were filthy lyrics concealed in the song. Indianas Governor personallybanned it from the states airwaves, and FBI bureaus in a number of states were required toinvestigate allegations of interstate commerce of obscene materials related to the sale of thesingle.

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Reliable Source: Mix the News: What censorship sounds like

Bledsoes take on censorship

ASHEBORO A less than packed auditorium did not stop New York Times best-selling author and Randolph County resident Jerry Bledsoe from speaking from the heart Thursday night at Randolph Community College (RCC).

Bledsoes topic of choice was censorship.

His talk was part of the seventh season of RCCs Cultural Arts Series and Randolph Reads: Invisible Man community reading initiative. Although Bledsoes RCC lecture was not planned to coincide with it, this is Banned Books Week across the nation.

Ive been involved in censorship for over 50 years, Bledsoe said. Ive written stories that never saw print. That in the newspaper business is called editing.

Bledsoe, author of 21 books, is known for several true crime titles based on murders in North Carolina. His journalism career, which spanned more than 20 years, included newspaper work in the North Carolina cities of Kannapolis, Charlotte and Greensboro, and work at Esquire magazine.

Some people in our country are trying to become visible, Bledsoe said. Im the opposite Im visible and trying to become invisible.

Bledsoe went on to explain a phone call he received from the U.S. Attorneys Office.

I called him and didnt get him, Bledsoe told the audience. Within a few minutes he called me back and we met at the FBIs office. They told me that they had listened to a recording from an informant and told me that they thought someone was going to put a hit on me. At the time I was writing about an officer involved in a national drug cartel. For the next three weeks, my wife, dog and I lived in a safe house.

When you get a hit put on you, that is the ultimate form of censorship.

Bledsoe shared several stories about his writings being censored. His first book, The Worlds Number One, Flat-Out, All-Time Great Stock Car Racing Book, was published in 1975. The book observes the sport of stock car racing and its links to the South. It talks about the driver, the fan and the promoter, and how all of their actions lead to race day. However, the book was banned by Catholic schools in Wisconsin opposed to the language used by the NASCAR drivers.

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Bledsoes take on censorship