Thursday, March 13, 2008

Rated PG for Profanity Guru

A new study by The Nielsen Co. found that the PG-rated movies with the least profanity made the most money at the U.S. box office. Sexuality or violence in those films had less to do with success than the language, the Nielsen PreView group said in a study being released Thursday. "The reality is that profanity, within PG, is the big demarcation between box office winner and box office loser," research and marketing director Dan O'Toole said at ShoWest, a conference where studios unveil upcoming movie lineups. "Parents are choosing PG films for their kids that have very, very low levels of profanity. We're talking one-third the level of the average PG film," he said. The research firm cross-referenced box office data on 400 films in wide-release from the fall of 2005 to the fall of 2007 with their ratings for sex, violence and profanity given by Critics Inc.'s Kids-In-Mind.com Web site. Controlling for marketing and production budgets of films, as well as depictions of violence and sex, movies that scored an average 0.8 on a 10-point profanity scale collected an average of $69 million. Those that averaged 2.8 for profanity averaged $38 million. All PG movies averaged 2.3 on the profanity scale.

WP: There's a profanity scale? Finally, I can be a perfect 10. Do they even make PG movies anymore that have profanity? Aren't those all grouped into PG-13 and that would explain why PG movies are lower on the scale? And...if there are PG movies with profanity, maybe they're not doing well at the box office because they just plain suck.

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