Cartoons
Simpsons ditched by Venezuelan TV
The Simpsons
has been dropped from morning TV in Venezuela after being deemed unsuitable
for children - and has been replaced by Baywatch
Story
from BBC
NEWS
(Published: April 09, 2008)
The popular US cartoon about the yellow
dysfunctional family was branded "inappropriate" and pulled
by the country's television authorities.
Caracas TV station Televen has started showing episodes of the beachside
show in the same mid-morning slot.
It became famous for its bikini-clad stars, including Pamela Anderson.
Glamorous locations
The country's TV regulator said the saga of Homer Simpson, wife Marge
and their three children flouted regulations that prohibit "messages
that go against the whole education of boys, girls and adolescents".
It said that some unspecified complaints had been received from viewers.
Televen's manager may decide to show The Simpsons, which has been
dubbed into Spanish, at another time of day. The station is showing
episodes of Baywatch Hawaii, a later incarnation of the lifeguard
rescue show which started in 1989. The serial, about a group of beach
lifeguards, gained notoriety for its attractive male and female cast
members coupled with glamorous locations and slow-motion running sequences.
Venezuelan TV is known for filling its schedules with re-runs of old
US series and Latin American soap operas. But it also includes a talk
show hosted by the country's president, Hugo Chavez. In an episode
of the weekly programme last year, the Venezuelan leader gave a speech
which reportedly lasted eight hours.
An abridged version of the show has been broadcast every day since
February 2007.
(Published: 10.04.2008.)
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