Specific banned shows, songs, etc...?

by AllAlongTheWatchtower 79 Replies latest watchtower beliefs

  • Mary
    Mary

    There were definitely some that we weren't supposed to watch:

    • Bewitched and/or I Dream of Jeannie. Some sister was watching Bewitched one day and whatever it was that popped up in Samantha and Derwood's living room, popped up in this sister's home-----one of the many Dub urban legends.
    • KISS, supposedly stood for Knights In Satan's Service and many youth had committed fornication while listening to I Wanna Rock and Roll All Night. We were even told not to listen to Beth, even though it was a beautiful song by Kiss, just because we'd be making Satan happy.
    • Star Trek, because it promoted the idea that there were aliens in outter space. Fortunately, my father was a die-hard Trekkie and he didn't pay the slightest attention to that crap.
    • Star Wars, because Anikan Skywalker/Darth Vadar represented Lucifer/Satan de Debbil---a fallen angel and The Force was not Jehovah's Holy Spirit and must therefore be from Satan.
    • Armageddon---the name says it all. I remember sitting there in the bookstudy and this fanatical Dub made the comment that "I'm sure no one here has even seen that movie!" Me and the conductor looked at each other and tried not to burst out laughing, because she was the only one there that hadn't seen it.
    • Anything with John Denver, The Eagles, Ozzie Ozborne, Iron Maiden, Blondie (the theme from American Gigalo inparticular), Styx
    • Any movie that promoted the idea of life after death---especially Ghost.
    • All of the Harry Potter books and movies
    • The Sixth Sense
    • All of the Anne Rice vampire books and movies
  • Inquisitor
    Inquisitor

    Many years ago, little Inq played a song on a musical instrument at a gathering of brothers. It wasn't a fantastic, standing-ovation-type performance. It was a simple effort by a kid to entertain the brothers and sisters that evening. At the end of the song, an elder walked up to little Inq and said, "That song is actually not appropriate for us. Do you know what it's all about? It's a song about a prostitute telling her customers when to pay her a visit!"

    The title of that song was "Never On A Sunday".

    Now this brother is no longer an elder. Initially, his anorexic wife caught him looking up porn on the Internet.

    The second and later offense, it was rumored, involved inappropriate behaviour towards a sister. Br. Porn is still trying very hard to show repentance and is struggling to live up to the Society's rules and men's harsh judgements of his mistakes.

    Irony can be so entertaining...

    INQ

  • ssrriotsquad
    ssrriotsquad

    I know 'Saturday Night Fever' was mentioned in a 70's WT when the movie was released, mainly to do with the illicit lifestyle of discos.

    Chubby Checker's "The Twist"

    A CO outlined a certain radio station in Australia regarding Triple J due to its homosexual contents etc. Only thing I listened to was Roy & HG - and still do.

    When we were extending our KH, we used to play the radio and/or tapes/cd's out loud through the sound system(to which some bro's didn't like). We used to play alot of JJ Cale with songs such as Cocaine, After Midnight, I'll Make Love To You Anytime, Cherry, Let Me Do It To You etc. I had no problem playing Poison, RHCP, Guns & Roses (the songs that didn't have swearing), Def Leppard. As regards AC/DC name, read Wikipedia as it stipulates how the name was brought to be. (I should know as my father was given the invitation to play bass for them when they first formed, but passed it to a mate of his, to which his mate passed to another of his mates).

    If some of the elders ever came to my place when I'm working around the house,

    1 - it will be load,

    2 - it be R&R or Blues

    and 3 - if they don't like it - Get Nicked!

  • MsMcDucket
    MsMcDucket

    I was told that all of the Disney stuff was evil because of the magic and because it made animals seem like humans (like mythology). Underdog was bad because he took a pill or something from his ring to get his power; this was obvious drug use. Any superhero that used drugs to get their power.

  • monophonic
    monophonic

    some elder idiot gave a local needs talk about the harms of music and named a bunch of bands to avoid like the red hot chili peppers, the cure, essentially anything that was alternative around 1991. it turned out he got the list of band names from his son for this talk. his son, was into gangster rap, so he just made a list of bands he didn't like. and like the idiot elder he was, w/o research, he went for it.

    i almost walked out...this was the same ass who when no one would raise their hands instantly at the watchtower study would say things like, 'didn't anybody study the watchtower yet?'.

    i started getting myself to the hall, on my scooter, instead of getting a ride so i could leave if he was doing the watchtower or giving a talk.

    it's a good thing them thar jehovers don't git educamated or theyz might thunk for themselfs.

    oh, my dad studied the bible with this weird dude who used to hang out and play his boom box while us 8 and 9 year olds would play soccer on the street...the guy was 18 or something and a little 'off'. one day, before my dad started the study, jim said, listen to this, and he played the recently released 'runnin' with the devil' by van halen. i was immediately taken in and thought it was the best thing ever. my dad freaked and told him never to play that again.

    that song still means a lot to me...it was the beginning of being saved by music, especially when i found out about punk rock when i was 14 and that there were people who had as much anger in them as i did. i would listen to college radio in my headphones all night while i slept, and we were told over and over never to do that by the congregation b/c you couldn't control what was going in your mind.

  • brinjen
    brinjen

    I remember the awake article about ET. They were always harping on about Madonna (which was why I was sooo into her). Indie music was seen as a no. The Bangles 'Eternal Flame' (also supposed to have backward masking). Fleetwood Mac (Stevie Nicks is supposed to be a witch) All metal, punk and rap. Basic Instinct, yeah remember that one. Bon Jovi, Faith No More.

  • brinjen
    brinjen

    Just remembered another, who else can recall the games 'Pac-Man' & 'Space Invaders' being frowned upon...because of the violence they portrayed

  • blondie
    blondie

    Under Category (Movies) in the WT Index

    *** g88 5/8 p. 18 What’s So Horrible About Horror Movies? Young People Ask . . .
    a reviewer (no name given) of the fourth “Friday the 13th” film remarked: “The 91-minute film consists of little more than bloody mayhem and teenage nudity . . . including brief shots of decapitation and garroting.” The featured character is “a demented killer named Jason, wearing a hockey mask, chopping up and skewering an assortment of teenage boys and girls.”

    When asked why she frequented horror movies, 16-year-old Melissa admitted quite candidly: “I like, like, guts. I don’t like going to a movie that’s all like Goldilocks. I like going to a movie like Nightmare on Elm Street.” She adds, “I like seeing people get ripped apart.”

    *** g96 7/22 p. 11 Freedom of Speech in the Home—Is It a Ticking Time Bomb? ***
    Some may argue that television and movie violence may not be taken literally by children and that all those horror movies are having no effect on them. “In that case,” commented a British newspaper, “why did a school authority in America’s mid-west have to tell thousands of children that there were no Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles in the local storm drains? The tiny Turtle fans had been crawling into the drains to look for them, that’s why.”

    *** jd chap. 9 p. 120 par. 18 Dealing With Others as God Desires ***
    If Habakkuk were alive now, would he not be appalled by the violence of our time? Many are steeped in violence from their youth on. Cartoons that enthrall boys and girls feature violence—one character tries to smash, blow up, or otherwise destroy another. Before long, many youths graduate to video games in which they win by shooting, exploding, or demolishing opponents. “Those are only games,” some may protest. Still, violent games played on a home computer or in a video arcade immerse players in violence, shaping their attitudes and reactions. How true the inspired counsel: “A man of violence will seduce his fellow, and certainly causes him to go in a way that is not good”!—Proverbs 16:29.

    *** g93 12/8 p. 11 Are Violent TV Cartoons Harmful? ***
    “BUGS Bunny Blamed for School Fights,” headlined The Times of London. The newspaper reported how some teachers feel about the behavior of youngsters who, it is claimed, imitate violent scenes from TV cartoons.

    Consider also the standards of behavior modern cartoons offer the next generation. The characters featured in one new cartoon craze are “an obnoxious family of loudmouths, layabouts and ‘underachievers,’” reports The Times of London. They appeal “partly because they are so anti-establishment. (Simpsons?)

    *** g93 3/8 p. 29 Watching the World ***/Effect of Violent Movies
    In an interview by the Brazilian magazine Veja, film director Steven Spielberg was asked about the effect that violence in entertainment may have on viewers. Said Spielberg: “Watching violence in movies or in TV programs stimulates the spectators to imitate what they see much more than if seen live or on TV news. In movies, violence is filmed with perfect illumination, spectacular scenery, and in slow motion, making it even romantic. However, in the news, the public has a much better perception of how horrible violence can be, and it is used with objectives that do not exist in the movies.” Spielberg adds that so far he has not permitted his young son to watch some of his well-known movies (Jaws, the Indiana Jones series) because of the amount of blood and violence shown.

    *** w83 7/15 p. 28 Watch Out for This Deceiver! ***
    Some years ago Roxanne went to see the movie The Exorcist, which spawned a host of imitations. She says: “The movie had a terrifying effect on me. I had to leave before it was over because I was afraid I would be sick to my stomach and felt like fainting. For about two months after seeing the movie, I continued to be terrified and would have nightmares

    *** w83 4/1 p. 16 Insight on the News ***
    Interest in extraterrestrial life has gained a tremendous popular following in recent years owing, in no small measure, to space travel, science fiction and the movie industry. Indeed, the two most popular motion pictures in history—Star Wars and E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial—are both on this subject. At the same time, costly scientific projects are going on in real earnest to find life and/or intelligence in outer space. The result is that for many people, especially the young, it is becoming increasingly harder to tell where science ends and where fiction begins.

    *** g84 1/22 p. 29 Watching the World/A New “Theology”?
    Whatever else the proliferation of science-fiction movies is doing, it may be changing the image of God in the minds of some of today’s youth. “The grandfather and father images of God don’t do anything for me,” explains a 17-year-old, quoted in the newspaper USA Today. “God is more of a spirit, like The Force in Star Wars and The Return of the Jedi.”

    Some clergymen apparently are capitalizing on the fad. “These new movies are good because they’re symbolic of a transcendent being and the power of God in life today,” says a Baptist Church official. “We utilize these themes from these movies in our teaching.” And a rabbi, who sees the trend as “a revival of theology under a different name: E.T., Star Wars, War Games, Superman, whatever,” claims that “theology is so important it is best not left solely to churches and synagogues.” Does this mean it should be left to science-fiction movie producers?

    *** g84 4/8 pp. 13-14 Do You ‘Feed Your Child a Scorpion’? ***
    Another director, Nicholas Meyer, “agrees that many movies are too gory. ‘Lots of movies are gratuitously violent. They pander to audiences—certainly, it’s a form of pornography.’” Then he was asked if he was concerned that children might be disturbed by the scorpion scene or by the sight of the bloody corpses in the movie Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan. His answer? “It’s a PG [Parental Guidance] movie. I never thought that either ‘Star Trek’ or ‘Time after Time’ should be seen by young children. . . . You can’t blame the film maker for the parents who don’t heed the rating system.”

    *** g80 7/22 p. 31 Watching the World ***TV Triggers Terror
    When the motion picture about demon possession “Exorcist II” was shown recently on U.S. television, a mother and her four-year-old daughter in Wichita Falls, Texas, reportedly watched it together. One scene is said to depict the cutting out of a girl’s heart to get rid of a demon. The little Texas girl was later found murdered in the same fashion. Her mother was charged with the homicide.

  • SnakesInTheTower
    SnakesInTheTower

    nvr

    I heard of guys getting the boot at Bethel for having in their posession music by ZZtop

    I know of Bethelites that would go to tape duplication, grab blank Kingdom Melodies cassette shells, open them up, and transfer their "heavy metal" cassette tape into them. Then they could listen to their favorite music while running the press. Yep, they got caught....guess the head banging motion doesn't quite match the kingdom melodies...

    back to topic:

    my banned show specifically was The Three Stooges

    I think more because we 3 boys were already stooges and, as Mom said: "You 3 don't need anymore ideas". Loved watching them in syndication (reruns) when mom was not around.

    SnakesInTheTower (of the "1 of 3 Stooges" Sheep Class)

  • Pistoff
    Pistoff

    In my home, my father was into music; he enjoyed the Beatles when they were on the Ed Sullivan show, way back when.
    And my mother was not that strict; it was some of my friends. Some were "outlaws", like me for a time, and others were complete monks.
    One of my friends had me hide his Iron Butterfly album; I don't recall why his parents didn't want him to have it, I guess the minor key sound freaked them out?
    I loved rock and roll; loved the Stones, though it was years before I would allow myself to buy an album.
    After all, their songs were Bitch, Brown Sugar, Can't Get No Satisfaction, etc; albums included Sticky Fingers, His Satanic Majesty's Request, etc.
    I know now that they loved to tweak people with the perception that they were demonic; in the song Monkey Man Mick sings:
    Hope we're not too messianic/Or a trifle too satanic.

    It seems to me that ALL rock and roll was frowned on; I remember the traveling gods quoting some worldly geek about "the phallic saxophone" in some great rock song.
    I had a young witness working for me for a while who got more and more righteous; he would chide us for the words in pop music we listened to on the crew; he listened to country. I kidded him back that country music continually about sleeping around and boozing, so he switched to classical music on the crew!!
    I then kidded him that the WT had mentioned the dissipated lifestyle of some classical composers; that made him switch to Kingdom Melodies, I am not kidding.
    I just banned radios on the job after that; it was just too weird to hear that syrupy crap on a jobsite.

    Movies:
    Saturday Night Fever
    ET, basically the Jesus story retold
    Some CO's trashed all movies, never mind which ones. The G rated stuff was Disney, hated for some reason I can't remember.

    I just recall all of the elders and CO's having a parochial mindset, a very stuffy stick to reading, studying and singing Kindgom Songs kind of attitude.

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