Dr. Merkwurdichliebe
Kiwiminister für Volksaufklärung und Propaganda
True & Honest Fan
kiwifarms.net
- Joined
- Apr 28, 2015
I liked this bit from his Ross Perot column:
Didn't even bother researching if Perot has a military record...how informative.
Earlier in this thread, someone posted Mr. Sweet's infamous TV ratings column. Pretty much everything he wrote about the history of movie ratings was factually incorrect. He was too lazy to do any research at all and just pulled the "facts" out of his ass.
Here we go, courtesy of He Sets Me On Fire:
TV RATING SYSTEM
In the beginning it was ratings for movies. It started with the basics: G for general audiences, PG meant that parents had to accompany their kids to the theaters, R meant that anyone under sixteen was not admitted, and X, of course, meant strictly adult.
Where to start?
Error 1: PG was not part of the original ("in the beginning") ratings system.
Error 2: When the PG rating was introduced, it did not mean that those under 16 had to be accompanied by a parent; it meant that parental guidance was recommended. (Gremlins was rated PG, for cryin' out loud.)
Errors 3 and 4: R did not mean that "anyone under 16 was not admitted"; it meant that those under 17 could see the movie if they were accompanied by a parent.
Error 5: X did not men "strictly adult." Those who were 17 -- and neither "strictly" nor legally adults --could attend X-rated films.
So, in the first two sentences of his most famous column ever, Mr. Sweet had five major factual errors. If only his career hadn't been derailed by the Liberal/Progressive Conspiracy™, there's no telling how far he would have gone in journalism.
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