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===1980s=== The first video to be banned by [[MTV]] was [[Queen (band)|Queen]]'s 1982 hit "[[Body Language (Queen song)|Body Language]]". Due to thinly veiled homoerotic undertones plus much skin and sweat (but apparently not enough clothing, save that worn by the fully clothed members of Queen themselves), it was deemed unsuitable for a television audience at the time. However, the channel did air [[Olivia Newton-John]]'s 1981 video for the hit song "[[Physical (Olivia Newton-John song)|Physical]]", which lavished camera time on male models working out in string bikinis who spurn her advances, ultimately pairing off to walk to the men's locker rooms holding hands, though the network ended the clip before the overt homosexual "reveal" ending in some airings. The video for "[[Girls on Film]]" by [[Duran Duran]], which featured topless women mud wrestling and other depictions of sexual fetishes was banned by the [[BBC]]. MTV did air the video, albeit in a heavily edited form. [[Laura Branigan]] initially protested an MTV request to edit her "[[Self Control (Raf song)#Laura Branigan version|Self Control]]" video in 1984, but relented when the network refused to air the [[William Friedkin]]-directed clip, featuring the singer lured through an increasingly debauched, if increasingly stylized, series of nightclubs by a masked man who ultimately takes her to bed. In 1989, [[Cher]]'s "[[If I Could Turn Back Time]]" video (where the singer performs the song in an extremely revealing body suit surrounded by a ship full of cheering sailors) was restricted to late-night broadcasts on MTV. [[The Sex Pistols]]' video for "[[God Save the Queen (Sex Pistols song)|God Save the Queen]]" was banned by the [[BBC]] for being "in gross bad taste". [[Mötley Crüe]]'s video for "[[Girls, Girls, Girls (Mötley Crüe song)|Girls, Girls, Girls]]" was banned by MTV for having completely nude women dancing around the members of the band in a [[strip club]], although they did produce another version that was accepted by MTV. In 1983, ''[[Entertainment Tonight]]'' ran a segment on censorship and "Rock Video Violence". The episode explored the impact of [[MTV]] rock video violence on the youth of the early 1980s. Excerpts from the music videos of [[Michael Jackson]], [[Duran Duran]], [[Golden Earring]], [[Kiss (band)|Kiss]], [[Kansas (band)|Kansas]], [[Billy Idol]], [[Def Leppard]], [[Pat Benatar]] and [[The Rolling Stones]] were shown. Dr. [[Thomas Radecki]] of the National Coalition on TV Violence was interviewed accusing the fledgling rock video business of excessive violence. ''[[Night Tracks]]''' producer Tom Lynch weighed in on the effects of the video violence controversy. Recording artists [[John Mellencamp|John Cougar Mellencamp]], [[Gene Simmons]] and [[Paul Stanley]] of Kiss, along with directors Dominic Orlando and [[Julien Temple]], provided a defense of their work. The episode's conclusion was that the controversy will continue to grow. Some artists have used censorship as a publicity tool. In the 1980s, the show ''Top of the Pops'' was censorious in its approach to video content, so some acts made videos that they knew would be censored, using the resulting public controversy to promote their release. Examples of this tactic were [[Duran Duran]]'s aforementioned "Girls on Film" and [[Frankie Goes to Hollywood]] with "[[Relax (song)|Relax]]", directed by [[Bernard Rose (director)|Bernard Rose]].
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