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TV-14 used due to more lucrative advertisement opportunities
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Many graphic scenes found in TV-14 rated shows
TV-14 Logo used when TV-MA should be
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Violent dramas on the broadcast networks carry milder parental cautions than cable shows like âThe Walking Deadâ but can equal them in graphic gore, a failure of the TV ratings system, a new study found.
Scenes of stabbings, shootings, rape, decapitation and mutilation invariably received a TV-14 âparents strongly cautionedâ rating on network TV, according to the Parents Television Council study released Monday.
But similar fare on cable typically was given the most stringent label, TV-MA for mature audiences only, researchers for the media watchdog group found.
âThere are zero-point-zero series rated TV-MA on broadcast,â said the media watchdog council President Tim Winter, despite programs that are awash in violent scenes.
It is vital to examine the mediaâs effect on children and real-world violence, Winter said, adding that he hopes his nonpartisan groupâs findings are part of a wide-ranging search for solutions.
The study of 14 series during a four-week period found a 6 percent difference in the overall incidence of violence of all types on cable versus broadcast, with 1,482 violent acts on the cable programs and 1,392 on the network series.
Federally regulated broadcasters face sanctions if they cross the line on indecency or expletives but not violence. With competition from unregulated cable and its variously daring series such as âBreaking Badâ and âMasters of Sex,â networks have resorted to more mayhem.
Episode ratings are decided by networks and cable channels, similar to how the movie studiosâ Motion Picture Association of America self-governs by issuing its own movie ratings. The TV Parental Guidelines Monitoring Board, which is composed of TV industry members and public interest advocates, checks for ratings uniformity and responds to public complaints. It received 38 complaints in the past year.
The ratings system âserves as a valuable resource for parents and helps them make responsible viewing decisions based on what is appropriate for their own families. The industry regularly reviews the TV ratings to ensure they continue to be useful to parents,â Missi Tessier, spokeswoman for the boardâs executive secretariat, said in response to the PTC study.
NBC, CBS, Fox and CW did not comment on the study, which did not include any ABC shows.
Under political and social pressure in the mid-1990s, the voluntary system was established by the TV industry to be used with the so-called V-chip that can block shows electronically.
Networks find it financially vital to avoid applying TV-MA ratings, Winters said, which scare off advertisers.
To assess how the ratings are used, the PTC said it analyzed the seven shows each on cable and broadcast TV that had the highest levels of violence. Each showâs first four episodes of the 2012-13 season were analyzed.
TV-14 warns that a program may include intense violence, sex or language not suitable for children under 14, while TV-MA is intended for shows that might have indecent language, graphic violence or explicit sexuality, according to the TV Parental Guidelines webpage.
The PTC study defined graphic as âespecially vivid, brutal and realistic acts of violenceâ that are explicitly depicted. Among the network examples cited:
â" A bar fight scene on NBCâs âRevolutionâ in which a character wields a sword and a dagger to slash open one manâs chest, cut anotherâs neck and stab a third in the chest. The blood-spattered character pulls his sword from the last victimâs body.
â" CWâs âSupernatural,â in which a trail of blood leads to the bodies of two priests impaled on a cemeteryâs wrought-iron fence. Their eyes have been gouged out and blood drips down their faces.
â" A woman is tortured in captivity, with an implanted camera sending images of her agony online in an episode of CBSâ âCriminal Minds.â An FBI agent watches as a hammer is driven into the victimâs head.
Depictions of shootings, stabbings and dismemberment were found on cable shows including AMCâs âThe Walking Deadâ and âBreaking Badâ and FXâs âSons of Anarchy.â Five of the seven cable shows had TV-MA ratings, with âWalking Deadâ eventually switching from TV-14 to MA.
Other broadcast shows in the study included NBCâs âThe Blacklist,â Foxâs âSleepy Hollow,â CBSâ âCSIâ and NBCâs âLaw & Order: Special Victims Unit.â
Although administered differently, movie ratings have also been criticism for being soft on violence. A study last month found the number of scenes featuring gun violence in PG-13 movies has come to rival or surpass the rate of such action in R-rated projects.
The PTCâs Winter said his groupâs study, taken together with the movie report, âstarts to weave together a fabric that urgently needs a public response.â
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