McCarthy said that Chasez had not been holding rehearsals at the Pro Bowl. As a result, the NFL made a preemptive strike, barring any possible wardrobe malfunctions from the halftime show.
It seems to me that they learned their lesson. I'm sure they didn't want another surprise show like they got last week. Good for them.
Instead of banning, those who do not wish to watch can just turn the TV off.
So the answer for you is, just in case somebody decides to rip their shirt and bra off andbody with children watching might want to just not bother watcching the game? So we as a society have decided to set our morals among the least common denominator? I don't want to see Janet Jackson's boobs anymore, does that mean every time she's on the TV I should shut it off, or should she just never strip on TV again?
Your idea makes little sense. I shouldn't have to 'just turn the TV off' because I don't want my children to see Janet Jackson's (or anybody else's) boobs, especially in the middle of a flippin FOOTBALL game. Had I been watching Sex and the City with my kids, then I guess I wouldn't have any right to be upset, that is exactly the setting for a flash of boob, but the Superbowl, give me a break.
Speaking of Sex and the City, that's the perfect example. I pretty much know beforehand that I'm gonna see boobs on that show, which leaves me with a choice. Should my kids watch this if I KNOW theyll show things that are innapropriate for younger people? But nobody was given the choice during the football game, or before.
If there had been one of those "This program may be innapropriate for small children' warnings, we'd have had a chance to think about it, but there was none.
Also, this has so little to do with actual 'boob', it has to do with the fact that football/The Superbowl is a multi-generatioal sport, so why is the half-time show produced mainly to 17-22 year old kids? There were children, Fathers. Mothers, Grandfathers, and Grandmothers watching that show, but they show young people bumping and grinding and then pretend that that is somehow entertainment. Again, sinking to the lowest common denominator.
In the end it was innapropriate and uncalled for, but it got Janet Jackson's name back in the papers, which is all she cared about.