(link fixed) Dire Straights song deemed unacceptable for Canadian radio.. thoughts?

TagsMissy

It's not always easy being the wife of a soldier.
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Jun 25, 2008
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What are your thoughts on this:

The song in question is: Money For Nothing

<snip>
The 1980s song Money for Nothing by the British rock band Dire Straits has been deemed unacceptable for play on Canadian radio.

In a ruling released Wednesday, the Canadian Broadcast Standards Council says the song contravenes the human rights clauses of the Canadian Association of Broadcasters' Code of Ethics and Equitable Portrayal Code.
</snip>

Read more: http://www.cbc.ca/arts/music/story/2011/01/13/money-for-nothing-radio-play-censor.html
 
Sorry all I noticed I accidentally broke the link earlier when I thought I had corrected it. LOL You should now be able to access the article on cbc.ca
 
I know the verse you're talking about, but it's been many years since I've heard the song played (either on Sirius or broadcast radio) without the verse edited out.
 
I'm sort of leaning on the side that it should be censored.

Out of context and for less "sensitive" listeners, it's an offensive lyric. I understand the song is about an underclass lad complaining that all you have to do to be rich is "play a little geetar on the MTV" and the lyric is to colour the ignorance of the singer, but most people miss that meaning and all they hear is the f-word.

I have similar feeling towards Rap and Hip Hop - I understand where it comes from and why money and women are objectified, but it doesn't make it right.

Trust me, I hate revisionist history. But the song doesn't diminish without the lyric.
 

http://www.cbc.ca/arts/music/story/2011/01/21/crtc-dire-straits-money-for-nothing.html

Money for Nothing review needed: CRTC
Regulator urges broadcast council to reconsider ban on unedited Dire Straits song

CRTC Link:
http://www.crtc.gc.ca/eng/com100/2011/r110121.htm
~~

So the drama 'Up North' continues. The CRTC which is an actual government entity working with Parliament and overrules the whole broadcasting/telecommuications network in Canada wants the ruling to be reviewed.

I am still torn on the issue -- while I do not like the word and wouldn't use it in any sort of derogatory way, I can also see its use in the song if that makes sense?
 
Within the context of the song, the lyric makes sense and is probably representative of the type of person being portrayed (at least at the time). But I wonder if that distinction is a little subtle for a lot of people to pick up on.

Even when it was new, I wondered what the reaction would be if the verse had contained a similarly derogatory (not even the "n" word) term about a black singer.
 



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