The UK and US versions are both called Kitchen Nightmares but have completely different tones and editing styles, and two very different depictions of Ramsay.
moved to appropriate thread
Really? Wouldnât someone with experience in censorship and broadcast program editing be required, probably different teams but thereâd need to be very close communication between the two as well (such as very specific frames let alone scenes and often meticulous or special skills). So Iâd imagine thatâd actually be departments within the networks themselves (some have been there for many decades like Nineâs chief sometimes interviewed by TVT) not the playout centres (like Eveleigh, North Sydney, Pyrmont, Ultimo and Artarmon), who would prepare the file to ingest for the playout teams.
Sorry, I was replying assuming he was talking about someone to choose the correct movie, not who had edited the film.
Iâm not too sure whether this still happens or not but why did 9,7 and 10 all show R-rated movies but always have them in the guide and on their channels as AV the supposed (adult violence rating) that the channels were or are still using. Seriously whatâs the point of that?
I donât understand the question, whatâs the point in airing a movie?
Because the TV classification ratings was different to the cinema classification ratings.
You couldnât show what was allowed in cinemas on television without edits. I guess TV didnât use R because it wasnât the same as the cinema classification.
do streaming services need to classify their content? I thought tv classification is for broadcast only?
Are they using tv or olfc guidelines?
Yes they do.
Interestingly, when I had Foxtel, I remember they did actually use the R classification for movies. I didnât look into it but assumed they were allowed to show movies uncut because it was subscription. Wasnât sure if the R classification was added just for subscription.
They still do this now. They get around it due to the parental lock feature. However Iâve noticed recently they will show a MA restricted version on the movie channel then only have the R rated version via ondemand. 0
Just looked this up on the Australian Government website: Classification categories | ALRC.
These are for Television:
Classification | Descriptor |
---|---|
P | Pre-school |
C | Children |
G | General |
PG | Parental Guidance |
M | Mature |
MA 15+ | Mature Audience. Not suitable for people under 15 |
MAV 15+ | Not suitable for people under 15: Strong Violence |
AV | Adult Violence |
R 18+ | Restricted |
Not sure why we still have both MAV and AV, I recall seeing SBS using MAV years ago.
It was to distinguish particularly âviolentâ content from the commensurate MA rating (i.e.) any MA-level violence or violence of strong impact was instead given AV. There was otherwise no difference, apart from AV couldnât be until 9:30pm vs MAâs 9pm. I believe at the time it was created, it was seen within society that violence was the most taboo element, if that makes any sense?
Yep, usually the World Movies channel and itâd automatically require a pin to unlock.
And yes Foxtel also edit for content, but theyâre Code is less carefully handled than FTA.
Yes. In 2015 AV15+ and MAV15+ was abolished and turned into MA15+. If I am correct episodes of South Park/Family Guy that had strong violence were rated MA15+, AV15+ was never used.
Why does this list not include the E and X classifications? It does mention X further down in the list but E isnât even mentioned. Is this no longer used?
That list is for television.
X content is not permitted on television.
E is for âexemptâ? Never seen that used on television.
Isnât E for Education?
I donât know, youâre the one that mentioned it?
The website says RC for Refused Classification. These are the Film and Games classifications:
Classification | Descriptor |
---|---|
G | General |
PG | Parental Guidance |
M | Mature |
MA 15+ | Mature Accompanied |
R 18+ (films only) | Restricted |
X 18+ (films only) | Restricted |
RC | Refused Classification |