Thursday, April 8, 2010

To Rate Or Not To Rate

R. PG13. G.

Everyone knows what these letters represent--movie ratings. What many people don't know, however, is how these movie ratings are decided. Jen Yamato wrote an article for Cinematical.com where this exact process is described by Joan Graves, the head of the Motion Pictures Association of America (MPAA). Basically, a group of parents from across the country votes on it and majority rules. However, this is not the meat of Yamato's article. She is more concerned with the entirely pro-censorship spin the MPAA has put on their website as of recently.

As an amateur author, I understand the arguments that censorship squashes the creativity of artists of all media types. I'd be upset, too, if someone told me I had to cut out this, that, and the third from my creation because it was simply too controversial. But I do not believe censorship to be a completely horrible thing. After all, it came about as a means to protect younger audiences from viewing potentially harmful images.

Also, as stated by the text Media/Society, the ratings system is a form of self-regulation. The system came about so the government wouldn't regulate or censor movies more strictly. It's a preventative measure to keep censorship from going too far in this art form.

So, as a preventative measure for too much censorship and a means of protection, some, minor forms of censorship can't really be all bad can it? What do you think?

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