When I started my career at NBC, my office was located right across the hall from several screening rooms. The screening rooms were used by advertisers and their agencies to review episodes of programs they were considering sponsoring before they aired. It was a way for sponsors to make sure the content reflected their corporate values or at least, would not reflect poorly on the product or company. If a television program included a car crash, for example, a car manufacturer might not want their ads to appear in the adjacent commercial break.
now, you will find that. let s be clear. it does exist. i ain t going to lie. but on a whole, it s just good-hearted people. you know? as far as the two other things people think about, coal is a dirty business with a dirty reputation that s become a dirty four-letter word. this show just got tv-ma. kids, cover your eyes. years of talk about alternative energy sources has slowly begun to turn into real action from solar panels on houses to electric cars on the street and to rumors that google is working on ways to power the city with the energy of kanye stage rants. these coal jobs aren t coming back. no matter what this guy says. coal is coming back, clean coal is coming back. 100%. as a nation, we have been conditioned to believe poverty is exclusively a black or brown thing, which would be one of the only things we re allowed to have for ourselves.
launched in if uk in 2007 to really good reviews. in fact, it s on award winning drama there, and it s hugery popular. the bottom line is the way i see it is that sex is an undercurrent of society, no matter where you live in the world. i kind of feel like do kids need to see more of it? we already have this show isn t you already have jersey show with every possible level of depravity exhibited. on a weekly basis. but let s be clear, mtv is not targeting the show at kids. it s rated at tv-ma. but it s totally going for kids. i m sorry, i have to interrupt. i am a former reality tv mtv cast member. i can tell you that the dirty little secret at mtv is that their demo is not 22-year-old college students. their demo is 12, 13-year-old kids, 14-year-old boys and girls
and they bear responsibility for what s going on. this was originally a british program that they ve adapted now to the united states. do you think it s much ado about nothing or is there a real problem here? i think it s much ado about nothing. let s be clear, the show launched in if uk in 2007 to really good reviews. in fact, it s on award winning drama there, and it s hugery popular. the bottom line is the way i see it is that sex is an undercurrent of society, no matter where you live in the world. i kind of feel like do kids need to see more of it? we already have this show isn t you already have jersey shore with every possible level of depravity exhibited. on a weekly basis. but let s be clear, mtv is not targeting the show at kids. it s rated at tv-ma. but it s totally going for kids. i m sorry, i have to interrupt. i am a former reality tv mtv