Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The first album to bear the "black and white" Parental Advisory label was the 1990 release of Banned in the U.S.A. by the rap group 2 Live Crew. [3] By May 1992, approximately 225 records had been marked with the warning. [4] In response to later hearings in the following years, it was reworded as "Parental Advisory: Explicit Content" in 1996.
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us; Donate
See WP:PD § Fonts and typefaces or Template talk:PD-textlogo for more information. This work includes material that may be protected as a trademark in some jurisdictions. If you want to use it, you have to ensure that you have the legal right to do so and that you do not infringe any trademark rights.
Date/Time Thumbnail Dimensions User Comment; current: 02:59, 8 September 2022: 523 × 327 (30 KB): Pythoncoder: Replaced autotrace with actual svg using the real font, from Wikia
The first of the familiar black-and-white parental advisory sticker debuted on 2 Live Crew's "Banned in the U.S.A." The album was released on July 24, 1990 — almost five years after the RIAA ...
Tipper Gore, co-founder of the Parents Music Resource Center in 1985. The Parents Music Resource Center (PMRC) was an American committee formed in 1985 [1] with the stated goal of increasing parental control over the access of children to music deemed to have violent, drug-related, or sexual themes via labeling albums with Parental Advisory stickers.
Parental Advisory: Explicit Lyrics is the 13th album by American comedian George Carlin. The album consists of content from his seventh HBO comedy special Doin' It Again, with some segments omitted and others rearranged. The opening to the HBO special features flashbacks to all of Carlin's previous HBO specials while Carlin talks about the ...
While speaking with Apple Music’s Zane Lowe ahead of her sophomore album’s release, Rodrigo said she recorded a ton of songs while making the new LP. “Probably like 25, not anything too ...