Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Songs containing potentially objectionable double entendres or mondegreens have also been subject to censorship. For example, the title and chorus of Britney Spears' single "If U Seek Amy" was intended to be misheard as "F-U-C-K me"; her label issued a radio edit which changed the word "seek" to "see", in order to remove the wordplay.
The Chicago Manual of Style (abbreviated as CMOS, TCM, or CMS, or sometimes as Chicago [1]) is a style guide for American English published since 1906 by the University of Chicago Press. Its 18 editions (the most recent in 2024) have prescribed writing and citation styles widely used in publishing.
Before censorship by the university administration, Chicago Review was an early and leading promoter of the Beat Movement in American literature. [5] In the autumn of 1958, it published an excerpt from Burroughs' Naked Lunch, which was judged obscene by the Chicago Daily News and sparked public outcry; [6] this episode led to the censorship of the following issue, to which the editors ...
With most of us buying music digitally these days, consumers are more used to seeing the "E" in Apple's iTunes Store than the old school "Parental Advisory: Explicit Content" label.
Song titles are not really treated differently from other titles. According to modern conventions for works written after the introduction of moveable type, the title of a book or journal or magazine is rendered in italics but the title of a smaller work within a book or journal or magazine is placed within quotation marks.
The following year, he moved to New York to become the Chicago-based magazine's New York editor. [6] He was fired in 1957, he alleged, because he attempted to hire an African-American writer. [21] Hentoff co-wrote Hear Me Talkin' to Ya: The Story of Jazz by the Men Who Made It (1955) with Nat Shapiro. [3]
The Clear Channel memorandum contains songs that, in their titles or lyrics, vaguely refer to open subjects intertwined with the September 11 attacks, such as airplanes, collisions, death, conflict, violence, explosions, the month of September, Tuesday (the day of the week the attacks occurred) and New York City, as well as general concepts that could be connected to aspects of the attacks ...
More than 50 of his essays (particularly those on 16th-century printers' devices) appeared in The Library Quarterly. [5] When editorship was taken over by Steven P. Harter in 1990 Winger wrote a history of the journal's editorial boards. [6] In 2002 editor, John V. Richardson, analyzed the peer review process in place at Library Quarterly. [7]