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Nuzum was 18 when Gore first heard "Darling Nikki" and was outraged by the congressional hearings that called stars such as Frank Zappa, Twisted Sister's Dee Snider and pop star John Denver to defend their music. This should be your mechanic in the local garage saying, `What is this garbage?'"Įven if such images are shocking, there's no evidence that outrageous or profane lyrics have ever permanently scarred young listeners, says writer and radio commentator Eric Nuzum, author of "Parental Advisory: Music Censorship in America" (HarperCollins, 368 pages, $15), a book on the rise of the PMRC.

It should come from women's groups, men's groups, parenting groups, PTAs. Where is the outrage? It shouldn't be just from conservative groups like Focus on the Family. "When Eminem speaks of raping his mother, or when Trent Reznor sang a few years back that he wants to `blank' you like an animal, it's all about perverse sex. What it does say is that parents have been desensitized and have delegated that area of child-raising to kids themselves."Īs a CD reviewer for Focus on the Family's Web site, Waliszewski praises groups such as Lifehouse, Creed, Train, Jimmy Eat World and singer Michelle Branch, but says that he can't endorse the vast majority of music he hears. Waliszewski says that, in 1984, "Nikki" was "kind of the worst thing that was out there, and now this kind of stuff is way too commonplace, but that doesn't make it right. If we were, there wouldn't be this collective yawn right now over `Nikki."'

"I'm not sure if the culture as a whole is ready to accept that. "Tipper was definitely on the right track all along," says Bob Waliszewski, manager of Focus on the Family's entertainment-review department.
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She couldn't be reached for comment, but other organizations are still busy monitoring an exponentially expanding media landscape that is still pushing the boundaries of taste.Įverything from rapper 50 Cent to the language and situations on TV reality shows to Internet porn vindicates Gore's foresight two decades ago, says a 10-year staff member of the conservative advocacy group Focus on the Family. Gore stepped down from the PMRC when her husband became vice president in 1992, and the group maintained a low profile in the 1990s. "The moral of the story is that today's dangerous music is tomorrow's Muzak," he says.
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Though Gore was maligned by some corners of the media and by rock stars, Paulson says he has no quarrel with her instincts as a concerned parent.īut he doesn't think the PMRC was ultimately good for the record industry or free speech. "Now that song is in elevators and in frozen-food sections." The song `With a Little Help From My Friends' was denigrated by Vice President Spiro Agnew in a speech in Las Vegas, in which he told the audience that the Beatles were trying to subvert kids through code. "That's what happens with popular culture, so it's really important to maintain a sense of perspective. "Just look at Cole Porter, who wrote that a `glimpse of stocking was once thought of as shocking.' That's a song writen 70 years ago about how shocking the new generation is. "Every generation's mores shock the previous generation," says Ken Paulson, executive director of the First Amendment Center, a free-speech advocacy organization based at Vanderbilt University in Nashville. The old girl is more of a nostalgia act now, which is just the way it goes. Violence and sex have been transformed into critically acclaimed art on HBO's "The Sopranos" or low-brow farce on Comedy Central's "The Man Show. Pornography is a mammoth and legitimate business.

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Besides, the world is full of real-life Nikkis - Paris and Britney and Christina, for starters. Nikki still likes to grind, but it doesn't sound that shocking anymore. Two decades later, the new "Nikki" has made nary a ripple on rock radio, where young listeners are surprised to learn that the Foo Fighters version isn't the first. It was pretty racy stuff in 1984, when Tipper Gore heard her young daughter listening to the original version on Prince's "Purple Rain." Because of "Darling Nikki," she started the Parents Music Resource Center in 1985 and a movement that eventually succeeded in putting content labels on albums. In case you don't remember, "Darling Nikki" is a song about a "sex fiend" and the dirty things she does in a hotel lobby with a magazine. Maybe we were too busy ogling the Paris Hilton video. "Darling Nikki" came back, but no one really noticed. Jim Abbott is the Orlando Sentinel's pop music critic 'Darling Nikki' is back, but where's the outrage now?īy Jim Abbott, Tribune Newspapers.
