When it comes to the Grammys, CBS exécs have skin on their minds.
Just
days after the Tiffany Network accidentally broadcast MVP quarterback
Joe Flacco dropping the F-bomb during the Super Bowl, a memo has leaked
in which CBS brass urge music industry luminaries to keep Sunday’s
Grammy telecast squeaky clean.
“Please
be sure that búttocks and female bréasts are adequately covered,” reads
the memo, distributed to awards show attendees and their
representatives.
“Thong type costumes are problematic,” reads the memo, first published on Deadline.
SEBASTIAN ARTZ/GETTY IMAGES
Singer Pink prefers necklines that may break some of CBS’s dress code.
“Please
avoid exposing bare fleshy under curves of the búttocks and búttock
crack. Bare sides or under curvature of the bréasts is also problematic.
Please avoid sheer see-through clothing that could possibly expose
female bréast nipplés. Please be sure the génital region is adequately
covered so that there is no visible `puffy’ baré skinésxposure.”
The
memo was distributed by a low-level staffer in the network’s standards
and practices department, tasked with keeping the airwaves free of
obscenities and indecency, a source told the Daily News. “Its content
was the result of a conference call” earlier this week among CBS
executives, the source said.
“It was never intended to be written down or emailed anywhere,” the source said. “It wasn’t approved by anybody.”
SCOTT GRIES/GETTY IMAGES
Jennifer Lopez set a new standard for daring in Versace at the 42nd Grammy Awards in 2000.
The music industry was amused by the network’s efforts.
“Right, they’re telling rock stars how to dress?” a music industry exec sneered in response to the memo. “Good luck with that.”
Other
topics covered in the memo included a plea to avoid commercial
identification “of actual brand name products on T-shirts,” instructions
that “foreign language on wardrobe will need to be cleared” and a call
to ban artists and other Grammy audience members from wearing “lapel
pins or any other form of accessory” that represent an “organized
cause.”
KEVIN WINTER/GETTY IMAGES
Lady Gaga’s fondness for revealing outfits might cause her trouble this year.
In capital letters, the memo states: “OBSCENITY OR PARTIALLY SEEN OBSCENITY ON WARDROBE IS UNACCEPTABLE FOR BROADCAST.”
Conference calls about keeping a live telecast clean are commonplace at broadcast networks.
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