MTV Movie Awards F-Bomb Video Speaks for Itself

Chris Houston
An MTV Movie Awards F-Bomb video speaks for itself. Let's just say not every single F-bomb was bleeped, blurted and censored on the MTV Movie Awards last night. This MTV Movie Awards F-bomb video kind of speaks for itself.

The F-bomb is no stranger to MTV. But how many times is enough? The show, which seems to try to push the limits each year, also featured a girl on girl kiss featuring Sandra Bullock and Scarlet Johannson. The envelope has certainly be pushed and I wouldn't be surprised if parents are outraged that such a show is allowed to let that happen.

MTV may draw heavy criticism in the coming days for not working harder to censor the F-bomb during the Movie Awards. Peter Facinelli of the Twilight trilogy was seen in the MTV Movie Awards video above dropping the F-bomb repeatedly. Some of his F-bombs were not censored. It was easy to tell that Peter wasn't saying Fudge.

What is likely to happen concerning MTV and it's role in the F-bomb or lack of it? Since MTV is on cable, it's not likely that fines will be handed down from the FCC. Such language is becoming, unfortunately, more commonplace on cable television.

The only unfortunate situation is that the viewing audience for MTV features many young impressionable minds. If you watch a Seth Rogen movie, you'll see what can happen to such young impressionable minds as they get older. I don't think the majority of parents are ultra offended at one or two F-bomb drops. At some point, it just becomes very immature and irresponsible. They are, after-all, just words. But at some point you feel as if there is a secret drinking game taking place backstage. Does everyone take a shot everytime an F-bomb gets placed?

Aren't the people dropping the F-bombs creative enough to talk without having to insist on using profanity?
These are supposedly some of the more creative people in Hollywood? And they need to resort to profanity tirades to get quick laughs? When I watch shows like the MTV Movie Awards, I feel as if everything gets 'dumbed down' anyway. The constant splurge of F-bombs like we saw in the above MTV Movie Awards video doesn't help.

Published by Chris Houston

Freelance Writer, Communications Specialist and Keyword Analyst in a small corn riddled Hoosier town. That's a mouthful, isn't it? Specifically I write about sports, reality television, entertainment, hot t...  View profile

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