What Green Day CDs need a Parental Advisory?

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Who Stole My Pants?
King For A Couple Of Days
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February 6th, 2008 at 02:35am
Everlongview.:
Pity_The_Clever:
Everlongview.:
idolangelx13:
American idiot is the only GD album with a PA
Well observed.


I always wonder if they put a PA on American Idiot because its political and crap, or maybe because of the drug "references" Coffee
If it was the drug references, you'd think Insomniac would have one....Shifty


Yeah and Insomniac says fuck and shit a lot too, Twisted Evil is it the bands who decides if an album has a PA? Right? Wrong?
Pattie Boyd
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February 6th, 2008 at 02:54am
Pity_The_Clever:
Everlongview.:
Pity_The_Clever:
Everlongview.:
idolangelx13:
American idiot is the only GD album with a PA
Well observed.


I always wonder if they put a PA on American Idiot because its political and crap, or maybe because of the drug "references" Coffee
If it was the drug references, you'd think Insomniac would have one....Shifty


Yeah and Insomniac says fuck and shit a lot too, Twisted Evil is it the bands who decides if an album has a PA? Right? Wrong?
Meh, it's more than likely the labels...-.-
Who Stole My Pants?
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February 7th, 2008 at 05:24am
Everlongview.:
Pity_The_Clever:


Yeah and Insomniac says fuck and shit a lot too, Twisted Evil is it the bands who decides if an album has a PA? Right? Wrong?
Meh, it's more than likely the labels...-.-


I highly doubt a PA makes much of a difference either way, whats a little sticker gonna do? Rolling Eyes
Angelic Fruitcake
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February 7th, 2008 at 01:27pm
People obviously thinks it's going to do something.
Stop little kids buying them 'cause their parents won't let them.
Never really works out very well though. : D
Who Stole My Pants?
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February 7th, 2008 at 04:29pm
Angelic Fruitcake:
People obviously thinks it's going to do something.
Stop little kids buying them 'cause their parents won't let them.
Never really works out very well though. : D


No it doesn't...just takes up a small corner of the case for us to stare at. Coffee
Angelic Fruitcake
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February 7th, 2008 at 06:42pm
Pity_The_Clever:
Angelic Fruitcake:
People obviously thinks it's going to do something.
Stop little kids buying them 'cause their parents won't let them.
Never really works out very well though. : D


No it doesn't...just takes up a small corner of the case for us to stare at. Coffee

tehe
When I was about 12 or 13 I wanted a QOTSA cd (with a P.A), and, looking much younger then, I was under the impression that I wouldn't buy it.
So I got my friend to get it for me.
And I don't think my parents were that bothered anyways.
But what I'm saying is it doesn't matter what they try to do to stop younger people listening to 'offensive' music; if they want to hear it, they'll find a way around it. : P
CurlyFries
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Mibba
February 14th, 2008 at 02:56am
Next time your parents give u a hard time bout GD's content, show them this article:

"Wonder what your teenager is listening to on those little white earbuds? How about 84 references to explicit substance abuse a day? Most of which, by the way, are associated with partying and sex.

About one third of the most popular songs of 2005 refer to substance abuse, according to a new analysis led by researchers at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine. They took on the task of counting because they were well aware of data showing that cigarette-smoking characters in movies tend to increase smoking among teenagers. This new study, published in the February Archives of Pediatric and Adolescent Medicine, didn't look for cause and effect. But it does give a sobering portrayal of just what's pouring into kids' ears.

There's a huge variation depending on the type of music. Pop songs almost never mentioned substance abuse, for example, while rap songs led the pack with 104.5 references per hour of song. The biggies for rap musicians were marijuana and other drugs, including cocaine. (It's hard to find a rap lyric that can be quoted on a family website, but the rappers 50 Cent and Ludacris were big that year.)

By contrast, the 33.7 references per hour in country songs focused almost exclusively on alcohol ("life looks good, good, good/Billy's got his beer goggles on"Wink. R&B and hip-hop songs included 14 references per hour. And rock-and-rollers may have been eight miles high in the 1960s, but the Foo Fighters and Green Day, the top rockers in 2005, must have been swilling decaf: The most popular rock songs contained just 6.8 substance abuse references each hour. Even more surprising is that most of the rock references talked about negative physical consequences, like becoming an alcoholic.Given that the average teenager listens to 2.4 hours of music a day and thus hears about 30,732 substance abuse references in music in the course of a year, should parents be ripping off the headphones and banning the Nano? No way, says Brian Primack, the pediatrician at Pitt who led the study. "At this point, since we really don't know what kind of impact there is on behavior, we don't need to have any really dramatic response." Censor music at home, he notes, and kids will inevitably find it elsewhere. Primack studies media literacy — that is, whether knowing how to analyze the underlying motivations behind advertisements and popular media help people make more informed (and, one would hope, more healthful) choices. Better, Primack says, to teach your kids to analyze and evaluate the messages that they do hear and to realize they don't necessarily reflect the truth. "Really, they're there to sell records, not to reflect reality."
Rocker Chic
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February 14th, 2008 at 03:05am
Cool article. I totally think R&B in general is worse than Rock, by far. They talk about sex and drugs more than Green Day ever has.

You also have to look at the band, regardless of whether they curse or not. I think I'd rather have my little cousins looking up to Green Day who speak their mind and are very nice guys, as opposed to say Kanye West, who's a complete a-hole.
CurlyFries
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Mibba
February 14th, 2008 at 04:16am
Amen Punki_poette. Very true, they're amazing role models for the youth...& even young adults my age.
Jimmy Sullivan
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Mibba
April 20th, 2008 at 05:09am
Most all of them, but, no one really pays attention to the Parental Advisory stickers

I mean, who wantsa a bleeped out song?
They're hecka annoying.
CurlyFries
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Mibba
May 3rd, 2008 at 06:48am
You guys do realize that you can buy the albums online, like Amazon.com for example, to get around being carded at the record store? It's essentially the same thing except you just have to deal with your parents, or even not at all.
I had to be carded once for a Box Car Racer CD, the store wouldn't let me have it either. My bf and I both got A.I. w/o any ID, but he does look older than I do.
My bf got carded for buying a season of South Park. It's so ridiculous tbh. I mean are you going to be expected to show I.D. if u view it at home?
Jeffree Star
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May 3rd, 2008 at 05:03pm
Nimrod needs one. Examples: Grouch, Platypus (I Hate You), Jynx
Green for a Day
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May 5th, 2008 at 01:44am
none. putting parental advisory stickers on green day cds would just be denying the little kiddies with overprotective parents of something really amazing.
Invalid Subject Line
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May 8th, 2008 at 01:30am
n00bie's now a geek:
none. putting parental advisory stickers on green day cds would just be denying the little kiddies with overprotective parents of something really amazing.

agree
CurlyFries
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Mibba
May 8th, 2008 at 08:19pm
yup
Wilhelm Fink2020
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Mibba
May 24th, 2008 at 08:25pm
I think the parental stuff screw up some awesome album covers...they should only be STICKERS on them...not printed on the case. =/
Rocker Chic
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May 25th, 2008 at 02:42am
The only GD cd that actually has a PA stamp on it is AI.
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