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Son of a gum chewing funk monster! Why the fruit does all this funny stuff happen to me?! Forget my life! Always surrounded by miserable failing clods, like this whole world just wants to bend me over and find me in the alps! Well, as far as I care, these miserable cows can have a fancy barbecue with a god damn pig!!!
When a show removes a perfectly innocuous word or words in a sentence, giving it dirty connotations. This can be done intentionally for comedy, to parody censorship, or unintentionally as a result of actual censorship because some one really messed up.
Intentionally bleeping out sections of innocent dialogue to make it sound dirty for comedic purposes has become known as Unnecessary Censorship .
Compare and contrast Innocent Innuendo, Accidental Innuendo. See also Cluster Bleep Bomb, Sound Effect Bleep, Manipulative Editing, Scunthorpe Problem, Smurfing, and T-Word Euphemism.
Intentional Examples
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Advertising
- A Tecate "cerveza" radio commercial aired in California in 2007 has the word "beer" beeped out.
- A commercial for Knorr frozen dinners deliberately bleeps out the word frozen, but only enough that you can still hear the "f" at the start and "n" at the end. Near the end of the commercial, the narrator notes "frozen doesn't have to be a bad word".
- A Swedish insurance company is currently running radio commercials of the form: insurance clerk repeats the claimant's story, with every third word or so bleeped. The claimant confirms that this is what happened, and the clerk tells him that no problem, we can cover that.
- Commercials for the then-new TV Land channel featured clips from wholesome shows like "The Brady Bunch" and "The Andy Griffith Show" with random censor bleeps, as if they'd been re-edited into something Darker and Edgier.
- Around March 2010, limited edition cans of Tango
were printed with risqué slogans printed with temperature-sensitive ink, so the cans would have to be chilled to reveal hidden words in phrases such as "Chilled Tango froze my pips off", "Chilled Tango made my stalk shrivel" and "Chilled Tango made my stones shrink".
Anime/Manga
- Suzumiya Haruhi: It wasn't a literal bleep, but some people found Mikuru's "I tried to contact but they said , etc., thing in Endless Eight similar to this. Especially when you consider what could be in there. Kyon even asks whether it's meant to censor something obscene.
- Haruhi gets bleeped as she blackmails the computer science club president to give her a computer by taking photos of him groping Mikuru. In the event he tries to deny it Haruhi says she'll say all the male thugs ganged up on Mikuru and *BLEEP* her.
- Lucky Star's Kagami in the OVA:
"I want to *** with Konata!
- This is apparently supposed to mean 'cosplay', though that could have its own Fetish Fuel in itself...
- Kyo Ani also seems to like to censor any names of anime/manga not from Kyo Ani (although it's blatantly obvious what they're talking about), with the exception of Keroro Gunsou. They can get very creative with the types of sounds used to bleep things out.
- Episode 7 of Full Metal Panic!? Fumoffu has tons of censoring speech by Sousuke, in order to butch up the sissy-pants rugby team. Arguably one of the best examples in anime (and one of the funniest as well).
- Hayate the Combat Butler has a lot of these effects throughout the anime series, which is due to parody.
- According to Fairy Tail volume 8's Q&A, Loke's guild tattoo is on his back.
- Some episodes of Gintama.
- One of the previews in Higurashi no Naku Koro ni Kai cover what the hell Hanyuu's horns are. Well, it's obvious isn't it? They're horns!
Film
- The "Lazy Pirate Day" interlude in Epic Movie has a short bit parodying rap censorship.
- Which in turn is based on "Beep" by The Pussycat Dolls, which does the same thing.
- Several instances in the Austin Powers movies.
- In Austin Powers in Goldmember there is a scene where Austin visits Mr. Roboto in his office looking for his father in Japan. He speaks Japanese to Austin for most of the scene but is revealed to have known how to speak English the entire time so subtitles are used to translate his words into English. The subtitles are displayed in white, and coincidentally, many objects in the office also happen to be white. Austin is aware of the subtitles, and as a result of carefully aligned camera angles, certain words in the subtitle are blotted out creating seemingly dirty phrases which elicit shocked reactions from Austin. Of course, once the objects blocking the subtitles are removed, the phrase is revealed to be perfectly normal. Mr. Roboto and Austin lampshades heavily on this trope.
- "Please eat some shitake mushrooms."
- "Your assignment is an unhappy one."
- "I have a huge rodent problem."
- In The Adventures Of Shark Boy And Lava Girl, Sharkboy is singing to get Max to sleep;
- "..Dream a dream you little bleem."
Literature
Live-Action TV
Music
- Aerosmith does this in the song "Just Push Play" (from the album titled the same) "Just push play, Fuckin' A! They're gonna *bleep* it anyway", with an actual bleep obscuring the word bleep, while "fuck" is left uncensored. This becomes amusing in radio broadcasts of the song, when BOTH are bleeped.
- The amusing thing is that the first two choruses have "fucking" beeped while saying "They're gonna beep it anyway." It's only the last chorus, after doing that twice, that they leave the profanity and beep the actual word beep.
- Five Iron Frenzy did this to parody the copious swearing of gangsta rap in Part 8 of their mock rock opera "These Are Not My Pants": loud BEEP's are applied liberally and completely at random over Micah's improvised rapping.
- When someone on the Lemon Demon forums asked for a version of "The Ultimate Showdown" with the word "ass" bleeped, he was given this
instead.
- Made even better when "ass" remains one of the only words not bleeped.
- One version of Dropkick Murphys "Pipebomb On Lansdowne (Dance Remix)" has bleeps in the entirely wrong spots at times (you'll have bleeps and then a clear "FUCK!" right after).
- Fall Out Boy has a live album titled *** Live in Phoenix. But what lies behind the *** anyway...?
- Fall Out Boy also has a song entitled "Our Lawyer Made Us Change the Name of This Song So We Wouldn't Get Sued". Nobody knows what the original title is.
- Sure they do, it was "My Name is David Ruffin... and These are The Temptations"
- As mentioned above, the Pussycat Dolls song "Beep" sounds incredibly dirty, as the end of almost every line is a beep, talking about what men "look at" and what men "play with." The most explicit thing mentioned, however, is wanting to hold the singer's hand.
- Used in the Songs To Wear Pants To song Little Eeeee Foo Foo
where 'bunny' is among the random bleeped words.
- Benny Bell's legendary "Shaving Cream."
- "Gallows Hill" by Sta' Warz
, which was an entry in a songfight competition: It's a mock-gangsta rap song where nearly every line had a bleep or two, but the members also posted the full lyrics, which were completely clean, if pretty nonsensical. For instance, "Mother said you can suck on my peppermints!", and "They call me fireman, 'cause I am one!".
- Subverted in The Notorious Cherry Bombs' song "It's Hard to Kiss the Lips At Night That Chew Your Ass Out All Day Long". They even Lampshade it with the lyrics 'It's okay if we say it, 'cause the radio won't play it'.
Newspaper Comics
- The Mad Libs
strips of Pearls Before Swine from November 2010, and before them, this.
- A Robotman and Monty comic strip did an inverted version. When the Fourth Wall Mail Slot gave them a letter complaining about swearing in the strip, the characters explained that the asterisks and other symbols actually stood for words like "puppy" and "Iowa".
Radio
Stand Up Comedy
- Neil Hamburger has a bit on one of his comedy albums called "The Top 10 List - Censored!". The whole joke is that the "audience" apparently finds the list hilarious, but anyone listening to the album can't make anything out because almost every other word is bleeped. Occasionally, the bleep will be too short to actually obscure a word, but the word will clearly be something completely unoffensive anyway: The word "internet" is censored, for instance.
Video Games
- In Sam and Max: What's New, Beelzebub?, the Freelance Police replace a list of "bad" words in the FCC office (which is a division of Hell) with Satan's grocery list. This leads to stuff like the Soda Poppers being referred to as the @#$% Poppers for the rest of the game.
- The whole point in this exercise is to get a vital piece of information out of Tiny Timmy, whose Tourettes Syndrome seemingly turns the little rat tyke into a fountain of bleeped-out cursing. Of course, once you switch the lists, it turns out that his "expletives" were all family friendly to begin with, although it's soon obvious why the demented Media Watchdog responsible would censor out the information as well ( it's the name "Dick Peacock"...think about it).
- The visual novel Tsukihime uses it interestingly by (actual spoiler) blanking out the word 'kill' to make the line "I want to her."
- Starcraft 2 has an interview with the Dominion's best ghost, sadly he cannot reveal any information about his job. But we are told it's very important.
Web Comics
Web Original
- Take a look
at this YTMND. Now take a look at this one .
- Here's
another YTMND that uses this. If you didn't know, the song is about baking cakes...
- A popular gag on YouTube Poop videos.
- YouTube musician Julia Nunes does this in a video
answering viewers' questions. Apparently, someone objected to Julia's mild, infrequent language as they allowed their children to watch her videos. Julia responded: "Hot dog! When will you bi lly goats realize that I'm twenty years old, and I'm gonna say whatever comes to my mind? Fu ngus! Ti ngly! Duck!Sh eets! Fondue!"
- What made it even better, though, is that the beep she used to censor herself was a recording of her own voice saying the word "beep".
- OAFEnet did this with their review of Shipwreck, under the conceit that since he's a sailor, he'd be cursing like one. Though all of the bleeped words were chosen at random, some of them worked out well
:
If nothing else, at least he got to date Cover Girl every month.
- This Youtube video
of Sesame Street's The Count singing his signature song has been subjected to this in the most simplistic but devastating way possible.
"I beep the spiders on the wall/I beep the cobwebs in the hall/I beep the candles on the shelf/when I'm alone I beep myself!"
- Due to difference in cultures, some Australians are amused when commonly used words such as hell and damn are censored on some websites and message boards, making the censored words seem a lot worse than they actually are.
- Episode 19 of Dragon Ball Abridged makes use of this trope.
- The IGN review
of Pokémon Black and White was "redacted" prior to the game's release to avoid spoilers. This resulted in humorous bits like this:
But then he turns into ¦¦¦¦¦¦, who looks like ¦¦¦¦ ¦¦¦¦¦ ¦¦¦¦ ¦ ¦¦¦¦ ¦¦¦ ¦¦¦¦ ¦¦¦¦¦ ¦¦¦¦ ¦ narwhal ¦¦¦ ¦ drunk bear ¦¦ ¦¦¦ ¦¦¦ ¦¦¦¦ ¦¦¦¦¦¦. ¦¦¦¦¦ conveys the image of ¦ ¦¦¦¦ ¦¦¦ ¦¦¦¦¦¦ ¦¦¦ ¦¦¦¦ ¦¦¦¦ melted ice cream sandwiches ¦¦¦ ¦¦¦ ¦¦¦¦¦¦¦ cigarette butts.
- My Little Pony Friendship Is Magic with censor
bleeps .
- Though the original videos are only rarely bleeped (most often in the case of Precision F-Strike), this edit
manages to take the soft spoken and eloquent Engie of Team Fortress 2 and manages to make him sound much more crass than he actually is. And then there's the bit at 0:54 in the edit which takes a bit of the game's innate abuse of Ludicrous Gibs and turn it into positively hilarious black comedy...
Western Animation
- Family Guy uses this in the episode "A Hero Sits Next Door": On Wheel of Fortune, a contestant ponders the incomplete puzzle phrase "GO _UCK YOURSELF". After the complete phrase is shown as "GO TUCK YOURSELF IN", Chris - watching at home with Peter - turns and says, "You were close, Dad."
- Actually, "GO TUCK YOURSELF IN" is the only option that is actually possible - there is already an "F" in "YOURSELF", which would have revealed the other "F" had it been guessed. Also, the two unguessed letters in the word "in" would have been visible on a real-life Wheel of Fortune board.
- Another puzzle phrase turned out to be "MY HAIRY AUNT" (not shown onscreen because the hidden "A" in "hairy" would've given it away) and, once again, Peter got it wrong.
- Another Wheel of Fortune gag turns up in the South Park episode "With Apologies to Jesse Jackson." Randy is a contestant on the show, and is confronted with the following puzzle phrase (in the category of "People who annoy you"): "N_GGERS". With time running out and after several long moments of hesitation, he finally blurts out the only answer that occurs to him...after which the correct answer is revealed as "NAGGERS".
- Another episode of South Park bleeped out words like "dummies" to make it appear the kindergarten-age characters were swearing as much then as they did in fourth grade.
- The Sealab2021 episode "Radio Free Sealab": The end of the episode, the Father-Son FCC duo have an exchange that is heavily but masterfully bleeped, implying a nasty conversation. A DVD extra features the unbleeped dialog which is much tamer and in many cases the opposite of what you were expecting. The younger agent's entire last line of dialog is bleeped to implying that he is cursing out his father, when he's actually saying something like "I love you, dad."
- Bleeped lines of dialog followed by unbleeped lines like "That's legal in Tijuana" make this an example of a Noodle Incident.
- An episode of Kablam! had Henry being bleeped randomly as a practical joke.
- Zig-zagged in the Danger Mouse episode "One Of Our Stately Homes Is Missing". The brick-and-mortar theft of the Duke of Bedbug mansion prompts DM to conclude they need help:
DM: Well, Colonel, looks like it's a job for BLEEP.
Penfold: Who's that?
Colonel K: Organization called BLEEP, Penfold.
Penfold: Oh, go on. You can tell me. I'm a trustee.
DM: Penfold, it's BLEEP.
Penfold: All right then. I shan't tell you where I hid the corn flakes.
DM: Penfold, shush. BLEEP is the Building Location and Emergency Expedition Platoon.
Unintentional Examples
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Comic Books
- During Jim Steranko's run on Nick Fury: Agent of S.H.I.E.L.D. he had drawn a passionate, yet fully-clothed heterosexual kiss. Knowing that it wouldn't pass the Comics Code Authority, Marvel editor Roy Thomas simply replaced it with a blow-up of a portion of an earlier panel— which depicted Fury's gun in its holster.
- The best part is that Thomas didn't realize what he'd done until Steranko called him up to congratulate him for making the page dirtier than he himself could ever have dreamed up.
Film
- Occasionally efforts to censor or cut a scene on the grounds that it would be objectionable to viewers might make the result seem worse due to Nothing Is Scarier:
- In Frankenstein, there is a scene where the Creature is playing with a little girl, throwing flowers onto a pond. After they are out of flowers to throw, he looks for something else pretty to throw into the pond, and chooses her, not understanding that she would drown. His killing the girl accidentally was deemed too intense for audiences of 1931, so execs cut off the scene just as he reached for her, jumping to her bereft father carrying her lifeless body back to town. Unfortunately, audiences imagine that the Creature had done something far worse than accidental murder.
- In The Brood, the birthing scene was similarly cut. David Cronenberg lamented at the cut, saying that he had a long and loving scene of Nola biting the infant free of the birthing sac and licking it clean, but the censors cut it just as she bit through the sac, leaving audiences with the impression that she was eating her baby.
Live-Action TV
- The first time episodes of Monty Python's Flying Circus were shown in the US, on ABC (yes, ABC's Wide World of Entertainment), there was some interesting censorship. Specifically, for this trope, in the episode about the Montgolfier brothers the narrator says "That night the Montgolfier brothers had a good bath, they washed their [a list of body parts follows] and also their BLEEP BLEEP." The words that were censored were "naughty bits".
- On one episode
of the American Whose Line Is It Anyway?, during game called "Title Sequence", Drew asked the audience for "Unlikely Roommates in a Sitcom". One audience member shouted "Bill Cosby and Hitler!", and the group all looked really excited to run with it... until the director walked over and told them they couldn't use Hitler. Carey and the crew, obviously pissed, ripped on the whole fiasco up until Ryan's fantastic verse during "Hoedown" -
Our director, he really is the boss,
For yelling and screaming, he's never at a loss,
He's the meanest guy you will ever see,
He should sprout a mustache and move to Germany!
- One season of Survivor featured a contestant whose regular outfit included camouflage-pattern pants. For some reason, CBS censors blurred out the pants, thus making it look like the contestant was pantsless.
- The reasoning (well, "Reasoning(TM)") was probably that camo... Somehow... Indicated gang affiliation.
- In one episode of 7th Heaven, Mary is upset that Simon called her "Big Butt." When the episode airs on the Hallmark Channel, they cut out the word "butt." This leaves the viewer to wonder what parts of his sister's body Simon could think are big.
- BBC America censors the use of the word "cock" as an exclamation, which makes Top Gear's James May sound much more potty-mouthed than usual.
- GMC (The Gospel Music Channel) censor words like "stupid" and "jerk" from its reruns of Sister Sister.
Music
- The radio version of Lily Allen's "Alfie" lets her mention her brother's "lazy arse" but transforms "smoking weed" to "smoking ..." and "high on THC" to "high on ...". It's not even a positive portrayal of drug use, and seems especially bizarre.
- Similarly, MTV's version of Third Eye Blind's "Semi-Charmed Life" garbles the words "crystal meth" and mutes out a couple other drug references. Not only does this end up making the song sound naughtier than it is, it kind of misses the point, since the song is about how drug use ruins a guy's life...
- A particularly odd example occurs in some radio versions of the Nickelback song "Rockstar", in which the words "drugs" is bleeped out, leading to the line "the girls come easy and the —- come cheap".
- MTV does this a lot with any lyrics relating to guns or drugs. One example that makes the song sound filthier was the video edit for "Le Disco" by Shiny Toy Guns, which turned "on your back, with loaded guns" into "on your back, with —-".
- There's a line in Eminem's "Cleaning Out My Closet" where he refers to his altercation with a guy who was having an affair with his wife:
What I did was stupid, no doubt it was dumb
But the smartest shit I did was take the bullets out of my gun
'Cuz I'd have killed him, shit, I would've shot Kim and him both
It's my life, I'd like to welcome y'all to the Eminem show
- MTV censored "shit," "bullets" and "gun," thus destroying a condemnation of violence. There's probably some kid somewhere who drifted into a life of crime because he never got to hear his idol denounce violence.
- Everlast's "What It's Like" contains the line "He pulled out his chrome .45, talked some shit, and wound up dead" on some radio stations. The second bleep is a legitimate swear word, but the first is "chrome .45." The gun-less version easily leads to some bad guesses about what exactly he "pulled out" that got him killed.
- British MTV even edited out the line "I drank a fifth of vodka, do you dare me to drive?" in Eminem's "My Name Is."
- Perhaps the most ridiculous example: the video for Electric Six's "Gay Bar" (already a masterpiece of comedic raunch) that censors words like "war" and "nuclear war." That's right, "nuclear war" is a dirty word. Even better is how the verse is censored with whip cracks: "Let's start [wha-khish!]/ start a [wha-khish! wha-khish!]/ at the gay bar, gay bar, gay bar!"
- If The Other Wiki is to be believed, the edits occurred on the UK version due to the song's release at the start of the Iraq war. Which explains it, even if it's still borderline silly. Incidentally (and even more ridiculously) the BBC banned Lulu's "Boom Bang-a-Bang" during the original Gulf War.
- Maroon 5's "This Love": "Keep her coming every night". Since even the most censor-prone radio station allows the word, it could lead to a lot of questions from innocent children as to why the word was removed. I was already in high school by that point, so for me it was more like, "Oh, right, that word has two meanings!" type of thing. The non-dirty meaning worked well enough in the context that I didn't even catch the real meaning until MTV pointed it out to me by censoring it. Of course, MTV's just weird like that. Later in the song, there's a pair of lines "Diggin' my fingertips/into every inch of you, because I know that's what you want me to do." Want to know which word got cut? Diggin'.
- Around the same time, Avril Lavigne's "Don't Tell Me" was on their hits rotation regularly. Due to their strict No Sex Allowed policy, a pair of lines was censored as such: "Don't think that your charm and the fact that your arm is now around my neck/Will get you in my pants I'll have to kick your ass and make you never forget" Never mind that the message of the song is abstinence, or that a minor curse word is left unbleeped just six words later. MTV is hilarious when it comes to censorship.
- Amusingly, they recently had All Time Low performing their song "Poppin' Champagne" live...wherein they censored the word "champagne." This is amusing for two reasons. One, it's the title of the song, and two, in protest to this, the band, as the last time they said it, replaced the lyric with "snortin' cocaine."
- Coheed and Cambria's "A Favor House Atlantic" has the line "I'll shoot, you run" in its refrain. MTV censors the word "shoot".
- The song "Teenage Dirtbag" by Wheatus has the line "And he brings a gun to school" censored on the radio edit.
- The radio edit of Ice Cube's "You Can Do It" blanks out the word "ass" in the chorus and replaces it with the sound of a whip cracking and a woman moaning - sounding way more sexual than the original words...
- The radio edit of Scissor Sisters' "Filthy/Gorgeous" bleeped the word "acid" (as in LSD)... but only the second syllable, which made it sound really... uh, filthy. "Trip on a hit of ass" indeed.
- In Malaysia, Katy Perry's song "I Kissed a Girl", after playing uncensored for a couple of weeks, had the word "Girl" censored out of the title and the song. The first thing that comes to mind after hearing the beep in the chorus are certain parts of anatomy, which makes the song much, much worse.
- Even the "cherry Chap Stick" line? Oh, my poor brain. The song cannot be sung at this student's high school either, quite frustrating as it's a real Earworm as well as inanely bothersome- but apparently, singing "I Kissed McCain" (as in, the presidential candidate) is a-OK.
- Which seems odd, considering they ran Jill Sobule's song of the same name with absolutely no cuts back in the '90s, much to the delight of Beavis.
- At Jamba Juice, the music that plays is from disks sent to the stores from the company. In an effort to be more hip, the disks have been including more recent hits, like M.I.A.'s "Paper Planes." They made the choice to censor out the sound effects, leaving us with "All I wanna do is ... and a ... and take your money," which can be interpreted as being strikingly sexual.
- The radio version of the 30 Seconds to Mars song "From Yesterday" suffers from this as well.
On a mountain he sits,
Not of gold but of sin
- There's at least one radio edit of Lady Gaga's "Poker Face" which bleeps out the entire line "when it's love, if it's not rough it isn't fun"
- A music video and a radio version of "Almost" by Bowling For Soup had been subjected to slightly overzealous censorship, making the line much more sexual than it would have been otherwise...
I almost got drunk at school at 14
- This also happened with "No Hablos Ingles". There's a bit in the video where they microphone up to someone bare ass on the line "Where'd you leave your pants?/No hablos ingles!" When aired it gets the black bar with the song title on it, making it look worse than it actually is. (You can't see anything in the uncensored version.)
- The original radio edit of Eve's "Let Me Blow Your Mind" simply blanks the cuss in the line, "Don't fight that good shit in your ear / now, let me blow your mind". A cover by Shawn Lee's Ping Pong Orchestra, however, has the line, "Don't fight that [boing] in your ear...", making it sound like something else entirely is being inserted into the listener's ear.
- Taylor Swift and T-Pain's made a short song "Thug Story". The end of the song was censored for comedic effect, with Taylor Swift protesting "But I didn't even swear".
- The radio version of "Na Na Na" by My Chemical Romance censors the word "drugs" three times in a row right from the start, while leaving the word "fuck" uncensored later in the song. Priorities!
- The version of Flogging Molly's "Drunken Lullabies" used in Tony Hawk's Pro Skater 4 censors the word "gun," which is pretty standard for this list. For reasons that are a bit shakier, it also censors "bigot."
- There is a radio edit of Foster the People's song "Pumped Up Kicks" that censors the words "bullet" and "gun". The Other Wiki notes that the song was intended "to bring awareness to the issue of gun violence amongst youth."
- The song Love The Way You Lie by Eminem and Rihanna is heavily censored on radio stations. One line is usually completely censored, but sometimes they inadvertently give the message that arson is acceptable by censoring the line like this:
If she ever tries to fuckin’ leave again
I’ma tie her to the bed and set this house on fire.
Western Animation
- Treehouse TV's broadcast of My Little Pony Friendship Is Magic censors out every instance of the word "loser". This only makes anything the character said sound like it must've been worse, the most jarring example being in "Party of One" when Pinkie Pie holds a party with inanimate objects after believing her friends abandoned her and provides the objects with voices.
Rocky: Not so bad?! Pu-lease! Dey’re a bunch’a [censored]! Pinkie Pie: Oh, c’mon now. “[censored]” might be a little strong, don’cha think? Sir Lintsalot: After the way they treated you? I say “[censored]” isn’t strong enough!
Real Life
- Some local TV stations' weather tickers will have three beeps as a sound effect, which may overlap with dialog and unintentionally censor it.
- Also happens on BBC radio when presenters "crash the pips" - accidentally overrun so that their dialogue overlaps with the hourly time signal.
- Most schools have abandoned actual bells to signal the beginning and ends of periods and instead use a tone played automatically over the PA system at a certain time. If a PA announcement is being made while the tone is scheduled to play, this trope happens.
- On the TV show Never Mind The Buzzcocks, a guest uttered a stream of swear words, which were bleeped out. The guest then informed the production team that they had just broadcast the Morse Code for "fuck".
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