Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
National

English F-Word Acceptable For French Broadcasts, Regulator Says

The Canadian Press, 08 Nov, 2017 12:19 PM
    Canada's broadcast standards regulator has ruled that a swear word that's off-limits on English-language broadcasts is acceptable in French programming.
     
     
    The Canadian Broadcast Standards Council ruled that a Quebec music radio station did not violate any rules by airing two clips of celebrities using the F-word as part of public speeches.
     
     
    A listener of CKOI-FM filed a complaint after hearing the profane clips from Madonna and Green Day lead singer Billie Joe Armstrong played two months apart on afternoon programming.
     
     
    The council ruled that CKOI-FM did not violate broadcast standards by playing the uncensored clips.
     
     
    It says the F-word does not have the same "vulgar connotation" in French that it does in English and notes that the term was not used as an insult directed at a specific target.
     
     
    The latest ruling is consistent with a similar decision handed down last year regarding a French-language television broadcast.
     
     
    CKOI referred to that past decision that excused television network MusiquePlus' use of the F-word in a broadcast, emphasizing that the word is construed differently in Canada's two official languages.
     
     
    The broadcast standards regulator referenced that decision again in its latest ruling, noting that language is evolutionary and reflects current society.
     
     
    "The panel prefers to impress upon broadcasters the need for appropriate viewer advisories and correct classification of programs rather than to target the occasional usage of vernacular language," the latest decision said.
     
     
    The two clips in the most recent case both involved celebrities whose music is played on CKOI making speeches in public settings, the council noted.
     
     
    The first instance came shortly before 4:30 p.m. on Jan. 23, when afternoon hosts were discussing Madonna's address to the recent Women's March on Washington. The hosts aired and discussed a clip in which the pop star concluded her remarks with a profanity aimed at those who opposed the march.
     
     
    Two months later, at 2:15 p.m. on March 25, a different afternoon host began discussing the rock group Green Day with a caller who had dialled in to request a song. When talk turned to a recent F-word-laden outburst from lead singer Armstrong, the host played an excerpt in which a variation of the word was heard three times.
     
     
    The council ruled that neither instance breached Canada's broadcast codes.
     
     
    "First, the primary language of the program must be French," the council wrote when laying out its criteria for use of the term. "Second, the use of the word must be infrequent; and third, the word cannot be used to insult or attack an individual or group. If a broadcast meets these three criteria, it is probable that the CBSC will not find a violation."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Quebec TV Personality Julie Snyder Files Sexual Assault Complaint Against Gilbert Rozon

    Quebec TV Personality Julie Snyder Files Sexual Assault Complaint Against Gilbert Rozon
    MONTREAL — Two more Quebec women have filed official complaints of sexual assault against Just For Laughs founder Gilbert Rozon.

    Quebec TV Personality Julie Snyder Files Sexual Assault Complaint Against Gilbert Rozon

    Saskatchewan Man Who Killed Wife Sentenced To Life, No Parole For 17 Years

    Saskatchewan Man Who Killed Wife Sentenced To Life, No Parole For 17 Years
    REGINA — A Saskatchewan man who shot and killed his wife in their Regina-area home has been sentenced to life in prison with no chance at parole for 17 years.

    Saskatchewan Man Who Killed Wife Sentenced To Life, No Parole For 17 Years

    CRA Analyzing Pre-Construction Condo Flipping Cases For Tax Avoidance

    CRA Analyzing Pre-Construction Condo Flipping Cases For Tax Avoidance
    Canada Revenue Agency is analyzing 2,810 transactions involving cases of pre-construction condominium flipping in Toronto to determine whether audits need to be carried out to find tax evaders.

    CRA Analyzing Pre-Construction Condo Flipping Cases For Tax Avoidance

    Bank Of Canada Holds Rate, Suggests More Hikes Likely At More-Cautious Pace

    Bank Of Canada Holds Rate, Suggests More Hikes Likely At More-Cautious Pace
    In its scheduled announcement, the central bank said it held off this time in part because it expects the recent strength of the Canadian dollar to slow the rise in the pace of inflation.

    Bank Of Canada Holds Rate, Suggests More Hikes Likely At More-Cautious Pace

    New Brunswick Couple Identified As Pair Found Dead In Rocky Mountains

    New Brunswick Couple Identified As Pair Found Dead In Rocky Mountains
    A couple from Saint John, N.B., have been identified as the two people found dead this week in the Rocky Mountains — police say the woman was murdered while the man's death is not considered criminal.

    New Brunswick Couple Identified As Pair Found Dead In Rocky Mountains

    WestJet Flight Makes Unscheduled Landing Due To Unruly, Drunk Passenger

    Cpl. Teri-Ann Deobald says in a news release that flight 3177 on Monday was supposed to fly from Calgary to Yellowknife.

    WestJet Flight Makes Unscheduled Landing Due To Unruly, Drunk Passenger