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Context Analysis / GettingCrapPastTheRadar

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1An in-depth look at GettingCrapPastTheRadar, and how censorship varies by territory and time period.
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3A writer of an innocent work -- often one that is for children -- may want to attract an audience beyond their target demographic. Maybe they want to say, "Hey, this isn't a SugarBowl where everyone acts super good!" However, one thing they have to think of is what the censors will catch.
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5For starters, let's look at the US rating systems for most content.
6* '''TV-Y''' is the lowest age rating a children's series can get. It generally means "It doesn't contain the slightest bit of content that would offend or frighten the youngest of children or the strictest of parents." In the early days of the US television rating system, most children's cartoons (including series such as ''WesternAnimation/SpongeBobSquarePants'') were given TV-Y ratings, but as AvoidTheDreadedGRating is starting to take effect, these cartoons are usually assigned TV-Y7 ratings, and if you do see a TV-Y rated show nowadays, it's definitely an EdutainmentShow.
7* '''TV-Y7''' shows, [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin as the name suggests]], are deemed appropriate for children ages 7 and up. They can include some cartoon or slapstick violence and some mild innuendo, and include most modern non-educational children's cartoons and [[KidCom Kid Coms]]. Despite still being aimed at kids, mild swearing like "crap," "hell," "damn," and "ass" is permissible.[[note]]Examples of shows like this include ''WesternAnimation/HeyArnold'', ''WebAnimation/TransformersWarForCybertron'', ''WesternAnimation/CourageTheCowardlyDog'', and ''WesternAnimation/KidCosmic''.[[/note]] If a TV-Y7 show contains fantasy violence with magic or guns ([[FamilyFriendlyFirearms family-friendly]] or not), then it gets the '''TV-Y7-FV''' (TV-Y7 with fantasy violence) content descriptor.
8* '''TV-G''' means "The show isn't necessarily targeted at kids, but it's appropriate for all ages to watch." This seems to be a catch-all rating for several types of shows, as several Nickelodeon and Disney Channel sitcoms carry this rating. Several TV shows that existed decades before the rating system was introduced (such as ''Series/ILoveLucy'') in the late '90s also have this rating. Like the TV-Y7 rating listed above, profanity has been able to find its way into shows regardless of its intended all-ages demographic.[[note]]Examples of this include ''Series/FullHouse'', ''Series/ClarissaExplainsItAll'', ''Series/TheMuppetShow'', and ''[[WesternAnimation/{{Histeria}} Histeria!]]''.[[/note]]
9* '''TV-PG''' shows generally allow slightly more innuendo and violence than TV-Y7 shows, and are where the content descriptors '''D''' for dialogue, '''L''' for language, '''S''' for sex, and '''V''' for violence start to be used. Casual recreational consumption of alcohol and tobacco (and cannabis in shows from the 2010s and later) sometimes show up in shows with this rating. As AvoidTheDreadedGRating starts to creep into TV-Y7 and more animation starts to be targeted at teenagers and adults, more cartoons, such as Cartoon Network originals ''WesternAnimation/AdventureTime'', ''WesternAnimation/RegularShow'', and ''WesternAnimation/StevenUniverse'' are being rated as TV-PG. Some adult animated series such as ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'' has this rating. But more adult animated series get...
10* The '''TV-14''' rating. It allows stronger sexual content and innuendo and more intense fantasy violence (and mild realistic violence). This is also where hard drug usage starts to be allowed; swearing stays at the level of "asshole," "shit," "tits", etc. Examples include anime airing on Adult Swim and Toonami such as ''Anime/CowboyBebop'' and ''Manga/AttackOnTitan'' as well as adult animation (''WesternAnimation/AmericanDad'' and ''WesternAnimation/RickAndMorty'''s TV edit) and live-action TV (''Series/SaturdayNightLive'').
11* The '''TV-MA''' rating is the highest allowed on network TV. It allows uncensored ClusterFBomb as well as CountryMatters, sex scenes, and realistic violence. Basically this is TV's R rating.
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13Video games are not particularly susceptible to AvoidTheDreadedGRating, so it's more possible to get crap past the radar. However, rating systems, such as North America's UsefulNotes/EntertainmentSoftwareRatingBoard in this case, still apply:
14* The '''E for Everyone''' rating is the lowest rating a video game can get (see below for additional details). They can contain mild amounts of cartoon violence and very little mild language (for example, ''VideoGame/{{Miitopia}}'' has food items called Hell Dogs, which are that game's version of the hot dog). Artistic nudity is also allowed (''VideoGame/AnimalCrossing'' games have uncensored nude artwork such as Creator/{{Michelangelo}}'s ''Art/{{David}}''). ''Franchise/SuperMarioBros'', ''Franchise/{{Pokemon}}'', and earlier ''Franchise/TheLegendOfZelda'' games generally have this rating.
15* The '''Everyone 10 and up (E10+)''' rating can allow more cartoon violence as well as fantasy violence, slight amounts of suggestive humor, and copious amounts of mild language such as "damn" and "hell". This rating was made in early 2005 to bridge the gap between the E and T ratings, hence why titles such as ''VideoGame/RatchetAndClank2002'' and ''VideoGame/SuperSmashBrosMelee'' are rated T despite being comparatively tame by today's T rating standards, and even some E-rated games such as the ''Sonic Adventure'' series are relatively intense for E standards. All three franchises are good examples of games that are commonly rated E10+[[note]]although ''VideoGame/SuperSmashBrosBrawl'' was rated T despite being released in 2008[[/note]]. Most modern ''Franchise/TheLegendOfZelda'' and ''Franchise/{{Kirby}}'' games (including a CompilationRerelease where an "Animated Blood" descriptor was retroactively added) also have this rating, having been bumped up from previously being E-rated.
16* The '''T for Teen''' rating allows violence, sexual innuendo and partial nudity[[note]]means characters appear naked but have their nipples ([[NippleAndDimed if female]]) and genitals censored[[/note]], little blood[[note]]though exceptions can exist such as ''VideoGame/StarCraftII''[[/note]], infrequent strong language, and depiction of alcohol use. There's a little more leniency for swearing than TV-14.
17* The '''M for Mature''' rating is the highest rating allowed for a video game to sell at retail and/or be available on consoles.[[note]]The ESRB being an entirely self-regulatory board, there are very few actual ''laws'' restricting the last rating -- AO, for Adults Only -- instead, most publishers and retailers simply refuse to deal in games that carry this rating. The Canadian provinces of Manitoba, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, Ontario, and Saskatchewan are the only jurisdictions where ESRB ratings are legally binding.[[/note]] There can be intense violence overflowing with blood and gore (though there ''is'' a limit, as ''VideoGame/{{Hatred}}'' got an Adults Only rating for its over-the-top violence), uncensored {{Cluster F Bomb}}ing, outright references to sex, and maybe some sex scenes and nudity (just not too egregious for the game to be regarded as pornographic).
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19Only AO-rated games can have real-money gambling, but this restriction doesn't apply to {{loot box}}es and other GachaGames. Note that expansion packs, DLC, and other microtransactions are rated by the ESRB, but user-generated content (such as mods, custom skins and maps, character names and usernames, and in-game communication) are not, and the ESRB explicitly mentions this fact. This trope generally does not cover user-generated content for this reason -- that's what VideoGamePerversityPotential is for.
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21ValuesDissonance plays a huge part in what, exactly, the censors are looking out for (See MediaNotes/MediaClassifications for further information). For example, European censors are rather lenient on sexual innuendo and violent content that would normally raise the film's rating to a PG-13, to the point where putting mild innuendo in a work meant for children doesn't even count as GettingCrapPastTheRadar, while something that would be GettingCrapPastTheRadar there would be enough to ban the work in countries with vocal MoralGuardians. A prime example is when a 2012 episode of the German-produced ''Literature/MayaTheBee'' was taken off Netflix in the United States after a concerned parent noticed a penis drawn in the background. While this would come unnoticed in Europe, the MoralGuardians are more vocal and influential in the United States, where a subtle gag put in by an animator would be enough to get the series banned. As another example, ''VideoGame/SuperSmashBrosForNintendo3DSAndWiiU'' received a Japan-only update to lengthen [[VideoGame/KidIcarus Palutena's]] dress due to CERO (the Japanese game ratings board) having strict rules about [[PantyShot upskirt shots]], while it passed by the ESRB and PEGI without issue.
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23Simple ValuesDissonance in some countries may also be mistaken for sexual innuendo in others. Take the French ''WesternAnimation/OggyAndTheCockroaches'', for example. In one episode, there is a portrait of a topless sunbathing woman hanging in the background. While is isn't uncommon to see topless female sunbathers in European countries (and even places outside of Europe that receive lots of tourists from there), it is very rare among Americans, and that particular FunnyBackgroundEvent got ''Oggy'' cancelled in the United States after a short run on Creator/{{Nickelodeon}}.
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25As society changes in many countries, censorship standards change with them, also. The Hays Code used in the United States before the MediaNotes/MotionPictureAssociationOfAmerica ratings, for example, [[SleepingSingle forbid depictions of couples sleeping in bed together]], and ''Series/LeaveItToBeaver'' was a pioneer in showing a toilet on TV. As ideas about minorities and non-heterosexual relationships change, the censors do, too. For example, HomoeroticSubtext in a children's cartoon may have been played as a radar-pushing gag in 2007, but, due to positive portrayals of same-sex couples in children's series in UsefulNotes/TheNewTens and beyond, this gag will be seen as [[OnceOriginalNowCommon]] to a present-day viewer, and may receive backlash for [[QueerPeopleAreFunny portraying queer love as a joke]].
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27If the gag is crucial (or at least makes sense) in the context of the story, then the censors will usually let it pass, therefore making it a '''non-example''' of this trope. [[SwearWordPlot Swear Word Plots]] or plots that involve getting CaughtWithYourPantsDown are especially relevant to this exception.
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29Sometimes, the writer will put something very blatant, such as a PrecisionFStrike, as a sort of TakeThat to the censors. This is called DefyingTheCensors, and is not an example, since GettingCrapPastTheRadar usually involves subtle things the writer hopes the censors won't catch.

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