Pay television content descriptors
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The United States pay television content advisory system is a
television content rating system Television content rating systems are systems for Content rating, evaluating the content and reporting the suitability of television programs for Minor (law), minors. Many countries have their own television evaluation, rating system and countrie ...
developed cooperatively by the American pay television industry; it first went into effect on March 1, 1994, on cable-originated premium channels owned by the system's principal developers,
Home Box Office, Inc. Home Box Office, Inc. (HBO) is an American multinational media and entertainment company operating as a unit of Warner Bros. Discovery. Founded by Charles Dolan and based out of WarnerMedia's former corporate headquarters at the 30 Hudson Yar ...
and Showtime Networks. The voluntary-participation system—developed to address public concerns about explicit sexual content, graphic violence and strong profanity that tend to be featured in pay-cable and
pay-per-view Pay-per-view (PPV) is a type of pay television or webcast service that enables a viewer to pay to watch individual events via private telecast. Events can be purchased through a multichannel television platform using their electronic program guid ...
programming—provides guidance to subscribers on the suitability of a
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for certain audiences based on its content. Used with standard age-based ratings issued per the Motion Picture Association film rating system and the TV Parental Guidelines, the system incorporates ten "content descriptors" (up to six of which can be used for an individual program) providing detailed information about the types of objectionable content contained in a
motion picture A film also called a movie, motion picture, moving picture, picture, photoplay or (slang) flick is a work of visual art that simulates experiences and otherwise communicates ideas, stories, perceptions, feelings, beauty, or atmosphere ...
or television program being aired on a particular service, including categories covering sexual content; different levels of violence, profanity and
nudity Nudity is the state of being in which a human is without clothing. The loss of body hair was one of the physical characteristics that marked the biological evolution of modern humans from their hominin ancestors. Adaptations related to ...
; and a general-purpose category covering crude and mature humor, innuendo and/or the use of alcoholic beverages, tobacco products or
drug A drug is any chemical substance that causes a change in an organism's physiology or psychology when consumed. Drugs are typically distinguished from food and substances that provide nutritional support. Consumption of drugs can be via insuffla ...
s. Like the TV Parental Guidelines, content ratings are determined by the individually participating pay television services. Ratings are applied to most original and acquired television series, theatrically released and made-for-cable films, documentaries and specials rated PG/TV-PG and above; they may also be applied to certain sporting events on general-entertainment-formatted pay services, primarily to account for
fleeting expletive A fleeting expletive is a non-scripted verbal profanity or obscenity expressed and broadcast during a live television broadcast or radio broadcast. The term appears primarily in discussions of United States broadcasting law. Notable examples In ...
s or other mild objectionable material that could occur during the broadcast. The ratings themselves have no legal force, and are not used during promotional advertisements. While bearing similarities to the content sub-ratings added to the TV Parental Guidelines in July 1997, the advisories in this system are relatively more succinct in ascribing the mature material incorporated into a program. Similar content guidelines have since been introduced by regional pay television industries or individual pay services outside of the U.S. (including Canada, Asia and Latin America). Within the United States, Comedy Central—which operates as a basic cable channel—has assigned "Graphic Language" advisory indicators for content bumpers on select TV-MA-rated original series (including ''
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'' and '' Workaholics'').


Development and implementation

Prior to the system’s creation and implementation, premium television services did not provide on-air content advisories at the start of a film, television series or special to notify viewers of mature subject matter included in the accordant telecast; vague illustrations of the suitability of a program for minors under age 18, depending on the program content and rating, were made using the program rating (e.g., as used in bumpers shown on
HBO Home Box Office (HBO) is an American premium television network, which is the flagship property of namesake parent subsidiary Home Box Office, Inc., itself a unit owned by Warner Bros. Discovery. The overall Home Box Office business unit is ba ...
and Cinemax from 1984 to 1986, "The following movie has been rated 'PG-13' by the Motion Picture Association of America. Some material may be inappropriate for young children; parents may wish to consider whether it should be viewed by those under 13."). Instead of showing on-air advisories, premium services chose to put content labels of relative detail (i.e., “violence, profanity”) in the synopses of program highlight insets and end-of-issue program summaries within the monthly program guides supplied to their subscribers. Amid parental concerns regarding the amount of violent content featured in premium cable and other television programming, in January 1994, representatives from the pay-cable television industry voluntarily pledged to establish a content advisory system in order to provide information to parents about program content that may be unsuitable for their children. This became structured as a system derived from the advisories published in their proprietary program guides, assigning individual ratings corresponding to the types of objectionable content depicted in a given program (categorized based on violence, profanity, sexuality or miscellaneous forms of mature material inapplicable to the other categories). The initial system adopted by the pay services of Home Box Office, Inc. (HBO and Cinemax) and Showtime Networks (
Showtime Showtime or Show Time may refer to: Film * ''Showtime'' (film), a 2002 American action/comedy film * ''Showtime'' (video), a 1995 live concert video by Blur Television Networks and channels * Showtime Networks, a division of Paramount Global w ...
, The Movie Channel and Flix) on March 1, 1994, consisted strictly of descriptive text outlining the mature material included the following telecast; the cooperative members featured the indicators—which initially differed slightly between the two parent companies—in the rating bumpers immediately preceding each program. On June 10, 1994, the Home Box Office and Showtime Networks services introduced a revised, uniform system: a set of block icons incorporating one of ten content codes—each two to three letters in length, and displayed in bold Fixedsys type—was added to supplement the applicable descriptive text, which was uniformally featured in a separate "page" of the rating bumper. (Since Home Box Office Inc. adopted the practice in 2015, most premium services—save for the Showtime Networks, which previously used the style from June 1994 to March 1995—have used a bumper format displaying the age-based rating, content advisories and
audio Audio most commonly refers to sound, as it is transmitted in signal form. It may also refer to: Sound *Audio signal, an electrical representation of sound *Audio frequency, a frequency in the audio spectrum *Digital audio, representation of sound ...
/ visual accessibility features on a single page.) Under the new system, each advisory label was placed into one of four categories: violence (“MV” for “mild violence”, “V” for “violence”, “GV” for “graphic violence” and “RP” for “rape”), suggestive or explicit sexual material (“BN” for brief nudity”, “N” for “nudity” and “SSC” for “strong sexual content”), profane language (“AL” for “adult language” and “GL” for “graphic language”) and a generalized descriptor for mature material that does not fit into the other categories (“AC” for “adult content”). Of the participating pay services, Showtime Networks was the only member in the cooperative to have its
continuity announcers In broadcasting, continuity or presentation (or station break in the U.S. and Canada) is announcements, messages and graphics played by the broadcaster between specific programmes. It typically includes programme schedules, announcement of the ...
read the advisory ratings, in addition to the then-commonplace announcement of the program ratings, utilizing such announcements during ratings bumpers until the Fall of 1997.
Liberty Media Liberty Media Corporation (commonly referred to as Liberty Media or just Liberty) is an American mass media company controlled by chairman John C. Malone. The company has three divisions, reflecting the company's ownership stakes in Formula One ...
-owned pay services
Starz Starz (stylized as STARZ since 2016; pronounced "stars") is an American premium cable and satellite television network owned by Lions Gate Entertainment, and is the flagship property of parent subsidiary Starz Inc. Programming on Starz consist ...
(which launched on April 1 of that year) and
Encore An encore is an additional performance given by performers after the planned show has ended, usually in response to extended applause from the audience.Lalange Cochrane, in ''Oxford Companion to Music'', Alison Latham, ed., Oxford University Pres ...
soon followed in implementing the system by September 1994, and by early 1997, it was in use across several of the major pay-per-view services, including Viewer's Choice and Request TV. Since then, the system has also been implemented by Sundance Channel (until its conversion to a basic cable channel in 2008), MoviePlex, and Epix. HBO, Cinemax, Showtime and Starz also include content advisories at the start of on-demand program selections over their respective video-on-demand and
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services; exceptions are HBO's co-branded HBO Max streaming service (which uses a wider array of descriptors that specify material normally covered by the system's broad-based "Adult Content" indicator), Showtime's licensed subscription channels for
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, The Roku Channel and Prime Video Channels (which instead use the generic descriptors created for the TV Parental Guidelines, used by the streaming marketplaces as a default advisory system, including for MPA-rated theatrical films), and Epix's VOD and streaming services (which do not use content advisory descriptors for on-demand titles, with the channel restricting their use to its live feeds). Programs are labeled at the discretion of each pay television service’s parent unit; because of this, as an example, a film labeled by HBO and Cinemax with a "GV" (graphic violence) advisory rating could conceivably be labeled with a "V" rating (usually indicating a moderate amount of violent content) if it were to air on Showtime, The Movie Channel and Flix. McAdory Lipscomb, former executive vice president of Showtime, described about how the advisories are applied, "It is possible that howtimewould rank something different than HBO, but we both recognize our dual responsibility to provide information to our subscribers about what is graphic or perhaps unsuitable for children, and we think the common language we've developed will provide an acceptable parameter." A November 1996 survey conducted by the University of Wisconsin–Madison and sponsored by the National PTA and the Institute for Mental Health Initiatives showed that 80% of parents who participated in the survey preferred the pay television industry’s content advisory system, assessing that it provided clearer detail of potentially objectionable content included in an individual program compared to age-based ratings systems like the MPAA’s system for theatrical films.


Usage of advisory system

Cable-originated premium services can assign as many as five content indicators for an individual program to advise viewers of whether its content is appropriate for minors, depending on age group, or adults with particular sensitivities to certain kinds of mature content. (e.g., HBO/Cinemax assigned the unrated version of the 2010 comedy '' Get Him to the Greek''—assigned a " TV-MA-L,S,V" rating by the services, but originally rated "R" for its theatrical release—indicators for adult content, for pervasive sexual dialogue, drug references, moderate alcohol and drug use, and crude humor; strong sexual content, for two separate scenes in which secondary lead character Aaron Green /nowiki>Jonah Hill">Jonah_Hill.html" ;"title="/nowiki>Jonah Hill">/nowiki>Jonah Hill/nowiki> had non-nude intercourse with different women, and had a dildo forcibly inserted orally and rubbed on his face; graphic language, for the film’s use of ~150 expletives; and nudity, for two scenes involving topless women and one that featured partially exposed male buttocks.) Softcore
pornographic film Pornographic films (pornos), erotic films, sex films, and 18+ films are films that present sexually explicit subject matter in order to arouse and satisfy the viewer. Pornographic films present sexual fantasies and usually include eroticall ...
s usually have been assigned advisory labels for strong sexual content (SC) and nudity (N), in addition to adult content (AC) and adult language (AL), although some, where included, have been tagged for violent content. Because they rarely include even mildly objectionable content fitting advisory criteria, premium services usually do not assign content labels for G-/TV-G-rated programs.


Advisory labels


Ratings-based usage

''Note: Content advisories are not applied to TV-Y-rated programming, as the subject material for programs assigned with the rating is oriented mainly to young children up to seven years of age.''


See also

* Motion Picture Association film rating system * TV Parental Guidelines


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:U.S. pay television content advisory system Entertainment rating organizations Media content ratings systems Cable television in the United States 1994 introductions 1994 establishments in the United States 1994 in American television