You're Wrong About - Tipper Gore vs. Heavy Metal: The Hearing
Episode Date: February 15, 2021Mike tells Sarah the real reason Congress called a bunch of rockers to Washington D.C. Digressions include cartoon violence, sleeveless tees and Trixie Mattel. Van Halen's "Hot for Teacher&q...uot; and Twisted Sister's "We're Not Gonna Take It" are dissected at length. Support us:Subscribe on PatreonDonate on PaypalBuy cute merchWhere else to find us: Sarah's other show, Why Are Dads Mike's other show, Maintenance PhaseLinks! The hearing transcript Dee Snider's memoirFrank Zappa's memoirRunning with the Devil: Power, Gender, and Madness in Heavy Metal MusicMusic-Evoked Emotions—Current Studies Don’t Let The Man Get You Down: Rock and Roll and The Development of The Parents’ Music Resource CenterSave the Children: The Parents’ Music Resource Center and Media ActivismHighway to Hell: Laws, Lawsuits, and Moral Panic over Heavy Metal MusicThe Parents’ Music Resource Center: From Information to Censorship“Leer-Ics” or Lyrics: Teenage Impressions of Rock 'n' RollParental Advisory – Explicit Content: The Parents Music Resource Center, Conservative Music Censorship, and the Protection of ChildrenAndrew Hartman’s A War for the Soul of America: A History of the Culture WarsThe Effects of Violent Music on Children and AdolescentsA Comparative Historical Analysis of Post-war Moral Panics and the Construction of Youth from 1938 to 2010Support the show
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I think that if we were going to have a big Senate hearing about something
irrelevant in the mid-80s, we should have had one about gremlins.
Welcome to your wrong about where often our problems come back to the gipper,
but sometimes they come back to the tipper.
That was our first homemade satanic rhyme. It's a tribute to Michelle this week.
It's a tribute to Michelle's sweet Satan.
I am Michael Hobbs. I'm a reporter for The Huffington Post.
I'm Sarah Marshall. I'm working on a book about the satanic panic.
And if you want to support the show, we're on Patreon at patreon.com slash your wrong about,
and you can find us in lots of other places with t-shirts and mugs and other options.
Yeah, or not, whatever, in real life. But here we are. We're going to talk about
the war on porn rock. Yes.
And I think we're going to have a good time.
Just like the Senators had on September 19th, 1985, when they had their little hearing.
We're going to party like it's 1985 when we're in the Senate.
Yes. Can you catch us up? Yes.
What did we cover last week?
Okay, so our story begins when a mom and wife of Senator Al Gore, by the name of Tipper,
innocently purchases the purple rain soundtrack for her 11-year-old daughter,
who presumably had not seen the movie. Yes.
And was horrified by the lyrics to the song, Darling Nikki.
Master Bating with a Magazine.
A great lyric. And we discussed in the previous episode, who I think we on this show are
pro-explicit masturbation descriptions in lyrics.
Certified freak, seven days a week.
Yeah. And this leads Tipper to have what I think is a very reasonable and good idea,
which is that music should have ratings. So this is just kind of attempting to regulate
corporate offerings, really, in a way that feels pretty central to the Democratic Party's ideas.
And she's also very explicit about the fact that she doesn't want legislation.
She wants the record companies to do this themselves, just like the movie industry did
themselves. Yeah. I mean, what is the literal chain of events from there? Immediately after
deciding music should have ratings, what is her first move?
Their first move is sending a letter to Stan Gordikov, who's the head of the Recording
Industry Association of America. And this is where they make the demand for the specific ratings.
They want V for violence, DA for drug, alcohol, O for occult, dicks and ass.
Basically, this whole summer, as they're doing this huge publicity blitz,
like notifying the entire country of all of the transgressions of rock music and all of the women
in bikinis on the covers, et cetera, they are in the background negotiating with the record
companies about how exactly this should work. The main argument that the record companies have
against this, and this is a very good point, only 350-ish movies come out every year in 1985,
whereas 3,500 albums featuring 25,000 songs come out every year. So the recording industry,
part of their pushback to this is just logistical. And like, what do we do if sort of, you know,
there's an album with 20 tracks on it and one of them is really bad? Does that mean we labeled
a whole record? I mean, one of the central bullshitnesses of this hearing, which I feel
like doesn't come up enough when you read these sort of like TH1 countdowns, like the time when
heavy metal pushed back against tipper, is that, okay, the hearing is on September 19th, 1985,
right? In August, the recording industry had already caved. So basically, as they've done this
like months-long negotiation with the Washington wives who are pushing all this, the recording
industry said, look, it's not going to work to have these specific ratings, like warning parents of
the specific content of the albums, because logistically, it's just too hard. However,
we are open to the idea of a generic warning label, right? And we know that this is what
we ended up with. That's pretty good, you know? This had already been done a month before the
hearing. So basically, everything that they talk about at the hearing is essentially a moot point.
And yet they managed to make this seem very exciting somehow.
I also think it's undercovered that this hearing is straightforwardly corrupt.
Go on.
In Tipper Gore's book, because she's writing her book two years after the hearing,
she says, in September 1985, Senator John Danforth of Missouri scheduled a hearing before the Senate's
Commerce Committee, which he chaired. The Commerce Committee has jurisdiction over
communications issues and wanted to investigate the prevalence of pornographic, violent rock
lyrics for its own information, not to consider any legislation. So the way that she presents it is
just like, well, this guy John Danforth just, you know, was walking down the street one day,
chewing gum, and he said, eh, let's have a hearing on this.
Why don't I do three things at once and just wow everybody even further?
What she doesn't mention is that his wife is a member of the PMRC.
We should think of the PMRC exactly the way that we think of, you know, PETA or the NRA
or any other interest group. It's pretty fucked up for a senator to call a hearing
at which one of his Senate colleagues wife testifies.
It's for the kids. You gotta cut a few corners to save the kids.
If his wife was like a ballistics missile consultant and all of a sudden he's doing a
hearing on ballistics missiles, which is like only tangentially related to the mandate of
this actual committee, like this is the Commerce Committee. This is not like the Free Speech Committee
or like the Music Committee. Or she works for like the Quorum Syrup Lobby and he suddenly is
like, let's have a hearing on more fruit loops in our schools.
Exactly. And also, okay, tell me if I'm like totally off base here, but I actually think
that the misogyny inherent in the critique of Tipper Gore and the other Washington wives
is central for why this wasn't a bigger deal. The fact that we're calling them Washington
wise even now kind of indicates that. I have this recurring mental image of like the female
characters and all the president's men. Yes. Like all of the backlash to the PMRC
has this very patronizing tone. It's like a bunch of housewives. They're drinking box wine
and they're mad about their rock lyrics. They're trying to slap our wrists.
Exactly. And it puts me in a weird position because I agree with that critique. Like I do
think that this is frivolous and that they should have spent their time on something else.
But it's also like the reasons why people are calling them frivolous and the reasons why people
do not take them seriously as a legitimate lobbying organization is because they are a bunch of like
big haired shoulder pads, 80s wives. And it's just like LOL, the wives want us to have a hearing.
I guess we'll have a hearing. I mean, to be fair in the 80s, everyone looked equally ridiculous.
Yes. Don't you think that this is also like this is the symptom of like the only kind of
political action that you can really move forward as a woman at the time, right? But like if you
also mock women for having this sort of frivolous shared cause, it's like, well, they were like
denied the opportunity to really be invested in more significant causes. It feels as if everyone
sort of latched onto this partly because they knew it was something that couldn't be taken away
from them. Well, I mean, I think it is one of those things where the framing is always that like
your your identity as a Washington wife comes before anything else. I do think that's one
of the ways that people were able to infantilize this entire movement, even though eventually
this movement gets basically everything they want. Well, yeah, because it aligns with interests
that already exist. Yes. It's sensorious. It's basically Christian, or at least it aligns
extremely well. Yeah. And it's for the children, which is the best way to do kind of any kooky
thing you want to do, which we've talked about before. And so this, this drives me nuts. This
is how Tipper describes her sort of behind the scenes conversations in her book when she's
talking about the hearing. So she talks about how this Danforth guy has scheduled the hearing.
She says, the hearing put me in an awkward position because my husband, Albert Gore Jr,
was a freshman member of the Commerce Committee. Some critics mistakenly assumed that he had asked
for the hearing when in fact, both he and I had had reservations about it. I thought the PMRC
would be better off working with artists in the industry on their own terms instead of dragging
everybody before TV cameras on Capitol Hill. I believe you, Tipper, but you know, I wouldn't
blame someone who doesn't. I do not believe a word of this. Like an organization that does
nothing but raise awareness of an issue, right? They don't have researchers. All they are doing
is giving interviews to the press and trying to whip up panic, public panic about this issue.
She's like, now why would I want a congressional hearing? I wouldn't want to bring my little
issue in front of cameras. There can be good faith in there to the extent that maybe it would
be nice to be able to do something, anything in politics without creating a media frenzy,
but we all know you have to. So I'm sorry. So the rest of this episode, we're just going to walk
through sort of speaker by speaker, like what happens at this hearing. We're going to watch
a bunch of clips. Yay. I was going to say, I hope we're going to get clippies. So we start with
the opening statement of John Danforth, who is this Republican Senator from Missouri. He basically
lays out the fundamental contradiction of this hearing. So listen to this. The reason for this
hearing is not to promote any legislation. Indeed, I don't know of any suggestion that any legislation
be passed, but to simply provide a forum for airing the issue itself, for ventilating the issue,
bringing it out into the public domain. The concern is that the public at large should be aware of
the existence of this kind of music and that kids of all ages are able to buy it.
And therefore, we need to use our time in the Senate to raise awareness, which is something
that is not our job, which could easily be done by practically anyone else. Thank you.
So it's basically, my wife is working on this issue. I'm not going to legislate about it,
but I will direct an avalanche of attention to her weird pet issue.
And then you take a drink from one of those comically tiny bottles of water.
We also get an opening statement from Paula Hawkins, who's a Republican Senator from Florida.
She says, as chairman of the Children, Family, Drugs, and Alcoholism subcommittee,
this is a subject I'm very familiar with. We decided as a committee in the last 18 months
to hold hearings discussing the role of the media in drug abuse and prevention and education.
There we learned that by the fourth grade, children have already decided whether or not to
take drugs. Citation needed, Paula. I don't know where that's from. That sounds like some
dare propaganda. This is one of the statements of the entire hearing that I agree the most with.
She says, it's the parent we blame if the child gets on drugs. It's the parent we blame if the
child commits suicide. It's the parent we blame if the child burns down a building. Just how much
guilt can we place on these parents without giving them some assistance? It's like, follow
that thought, Paula. Keep going, Paula. And the way we can assist these struggling American
parents is by putting little labels that say dicks and ass on their CDs. We then get to our
visual aid portion of the hearing, which I love. So Paula shows three albums. Nice. One of the
albums we already looked at, that's the Wendy O. Williams one, where she's in the Road Warrior
Bikini. Love it. She then shows them. I'm going to send these to you. Again, I'm not going to
post these on our website, but you can easily Google to them. This is Def Leppard Pyromania.
Oh, it's a building on fire. Yeah. Yeah. And we're looking at it through a scope on a gun,
I guess, or like a flamethrower or something. It looks like Terminator Vision in those movies.
Yeah. So basically it's the POV, presumably of whoever has just launched whatever you need to
launch at a building to take out several floors and just put like a gaping fiery hole in a skyscraper.
Yes. So this album is glorifying violence, something, something, terrorism. I mean, this is
before we have school shootings as a phenomenon and before we have terrorism as a moral panic.
Yeah. I'm thinking of 9-11, which this looks uncannily like.
So the third album cover that she shows, I know you've seen this one.
Oh yeah. Oh boy. Yeah. Yeah. I forgot that it looked like this, but of course it does. Oh my
God. It's funny because like on so many episodes, I'm like, why is it that the heteronormativity
feels so violent? And then I'm like, well… Yeah.
So what album is it, Sarah? It's Animal, parentheses, F star, star, K like a beast.
And it depicts a gentleman who is wearing a cod piece that is tiger print and actually looks
like a chastity belt, but it's like a reverse chastity belt because a circular saw is coming
out of it. Yeah. And he's got blood all over him, I might add.
Really fake blood, like neon red blood.
It's gorgeous. Yeah. It's like sysperia, like tempera blood.
Do you think this is misogynistic? I don't know that I know what this album is supposed to mean.
I think it's just scary. It's an album cover that makes you sort of put a hand over your area,
like Don Cheadle in Ocean's Eleven. Yeah. Because it's not clear to me if the circular
saw is coming out of his junk or if the circular saw is like attacking his junk.
Right. Like what if this guy is a saw victim? Yeah.
I also would like to mention that the song that this is depicting, like this actual song,
is about masturbating and fantasizing about dominating women. Like the first lyric,
the first line of it is, I got pictures of naked ladies. Yeah.
There could be like a conversation to be had again without an eye toward legislation about like,
why is there so much violent sexual fantasy? Yes.
Let's take some time and talk about that. But nobody wants to watch that, I guess.
It so reminds me of the morality that I grew up with, where it's much more about vulgarity
than it is about morality. Yeah.
Like the only thing she's interested in is this extremely narrow version of basically
Christian morality, where it's like, you said a swear.
The weirdest thing is that this WASP album is really, this cover is almost upholding
Christian morality, because I feel like the message that Christianity and sort of conventional
American sexual mores have toward girls having sex is like, if you ever have sex even one time,
you'll be different forever and essentially maimed. Yes.
You know, and it's like, that's not far off from like a circular saw coming for you.
That's true, actually. They should love this picture.
This is really insightful, because it's, you're basically casting the male crotch
as fundamentally threatening in this very thuddingly obvious way.
As opposed to just, you know, what it is, which is this sort of cute, embarrassing little organism.
It's also, I think one of the most important aspects of this is this indicates how full of
shit the PMRC is to me, because these are not song lyrics. These are record covers.
Yes. And everything that we're ostensibly talking about today is supposed to be about
the question, should we put warning labels on music with offensive lyrics? And here we have
two album covers that are like pretty blatantly offensive. And in some ways, that gets rid of
the need for a warning label. There's no way you would buy this WASP album for your 11-year-old
daughter and be like, I had no idea. If you bought this WASP album for your
11-year-old daughter, then like, I want to know every single other thing that ever happened in
your family. That's the thing. It's sort of like, this album cover is doing what you say you want.
It is warning you, this is inappropriate for children. Right. And that is what metal covers
are, you know? They're like a colorful bird. So after our presentation of the three album covers,
we then get our first medley of music videos. Yay. Do you know which videos they played for
the committee? I have no idea. I'm really, I just, oh my god, I can't wait. Did they,
they didn't play she bop, did they? No, they played, they chose very weird videos to play.
So the first one is Van Halen's Hot for Teacher. It's a cute video. It's a cute video.
So do you remember the video? Have you seen it? Do you know what it's about? Yeah. It's a little
dweeb going to school and being hot for teacher and Eddie Van Halen is bouncing around. Yes. And
the teacher is hot and dances around in a bikini a little bit. It's hard to distinguish it from
literally hundreds of other videos of the time, which we're just like, let's not try that hard
and let's hire one or two beautiful women and put them in some shiny bikinis and have them
jump around a little bit. And there you go. There's your video. It's not rocket science.
You know, I wish that in these presentations in the congressional hearing, they had said more about
why this video is offensive because it feels to me like the reason they find it offensive is
because it features a woman in a bikini. Yeah. I mean, she's got kind of a pageant sash. Yeah.
That's she, I mean, which reminds you of the bikini or the bathing suit competition in Miss
America, which is not really wearing anything fundamentally different from what you see in
that. So I guess you could argue that it's inappropriate to suggest to children the idea
that their teachers can be hot, but like they know that. Okay. So video number two is we're
not going to take it by Twisted Sister. Yay. This is a classic. Okay, we're going to watch this
together. Okay. You got it. Yeah. It's got a James Woods looking motherfucker. Three, two, one, go.
All right, Mr. What do you think you're doing? You call this a room? This is a pigsty.
I want you to straighten up this area now. You are a disgusting flop. Stand up straight.
Tuck in that shirt. Adjust that belt buckle. Tie those shoes. You do nothing. You are nothing.
You sit in here all day and play that sick repulsive electric twanger. I carried an M16 and
yo, you carry that guitar. Who are you? Where do you come from? Are you listening to me?
What do you want to do with your life? I want to rock.
Okay. So the little boy spun around and became D. Snyder and he looks like Trixie Mattel.
Yes. I guess Trixie Mattel looks like him. Imagine us being played in Congress, Sarah.
You know what? I'm sure it was one of their better sessions.
There's something extremely funny to me about people playing this video in these panicked,
hushed tones. This is what your children are listening to.
Like they're watching a leaked the heading video. I cannot stress enough how much makeup
D. Snyder is wearing. He's going through three pallets a week.
Yeah, just the vividness of the hues. I've always loved this song. It's just a nice-
It also has the lyric, we've got the right to choose, I think, and it always makes me think
of abortion. That was fantastic. I'm sorry. How many American children have a dad who's mean
and scary that way? Millions, millions upon millions. How is this a threat to them?
So later on, famously D. Snyder will testify at this hearing. The case against the song,
of course, is that it glorifies violence and that it glorifies standing up to authority.
Well, that's terrible. I know. Which, first of all, is fine. Secondly,
he calls it roadrunner violence. Right. The first thing that happens to the dad
is that the kid is playing guitar and then he's like, I want to rock. And then he
strums his guitar and the power of his rock and blasts his dad backward and pushes him through a
wall. And then he lands on the ground in this cartoonish way and then mom comes by and dumps
water on him. Like, it's very obviously meant to be funny.
And also, like, I'm fine with having images of violence against dads.
Yes. Just because you guys work for the government doesn't mean that you have to defend
the idea that all parents in America deserve the authority that they expect from their children.
Like, that's a ridiculous proposition. It seems noteworthy that the only reason this song
is on the sort of filthy 15 of the worst offending music in America is because of the video,
which, again, is irrelevant for the ostensible reason we are here today,
which is to talk about warning labels on CD covers at the record store.
Once again, like, I realize we're not allowed to look at country music because you don't want
to come for Nashville. But the country music is about that, too. Like, this is the basic
experience of being human is wanting to have some kind of say in what you do with your
existence. Like, this is not a twisted sister problem.
I mean, a lot of people do point out, if you want to talk about music with violent themes,
like, have you been to operas? Like, many operas have extremely violent themes in them.
My favorite opera, Don Giovanni, ends with a statue coming directly up from hell and pulling
the protagonist into hell. Just literally drags him to hell, you know? That's the end.
Okay, so they watched the videos, but we're not going to take it
and hot for teacher. Is that's going to persuade anyone of anything?
And then we get one speech by Susan Baker, who's one of Tipper's colleagues on the PMRC.
She does basically just like boilerplate. This is bad for kids. I'm in the PTA.
And then we have Tipper gives a little speech, although Tipper sort of doesn't do the sort
of moral panicky stuff. She mostly talks about the logistics of the various labeling ideas.
She also brings up this sort of plan B solution to the problem, which comes up a ton in the rest
of the hearing, which is this absurd idea, which is that they're going to require every record
store in America to keep a copy of all the lyrics of all the albums behind the counter
available to parents at any time. No.
It's like, ma'am, do you know how many albums stores carry? That's going to be a stack of paper,
like 15 feet high. Like your kid says, like, I want to buy this Pink Floyd album. And you have
to go look at the lyrics to the entire the wall. Yes, you buy it for them. It's going to take 45
minutes. It's funny because there are some parents who are already that ridiculously
dedicated and they're already doing their thing. And if this kind of thing happened, then the people
who would look at the record store copy of the lyrics are the ones who would be figuring them
out anyway, because that's an amazing amount of time to drop on something that really doesn't
matter all that much. There's so much of the rest of the hearing is people talking about how the
publishing rights for the lyrics are different than the music rights to the songs. So this would
actually be a huge challenge for the record companies to do. And there's all this sort of back
and forth about how to do this. Like one person proposes, like, oh, well, we should require
artists to have the lyrics in sort of the album sleeve, you know, that comes with the album.
But then somebody else points out that by the time you can read the lyrics, you've already bought
the album. So there's no point in doing this. Like, it's just a bad idea. But instead of anyone
just being like, sorry, guys, this is bad, they just sort of debate the particulars all day.
And then they're like, oh, the electoral college it is.
So now we get into the famous phase of the hearing where we have a number of celebrity guests.
Oh my god.
So our first testifier, testimonial, is Frank Zappa. I always wondered like Frank Zappa doesn't
really make the kind of music that they're shitting on in the hearing like he's not really a heavy
metal or hair metal guy. You know, none of his songs have been singled out by Tipper Gore.
So the reason why he's there and the reason why he's deputized to be sort of the face of the push
back is that no other artist was doing this. He mentions in his memoir that this whole summer
when the PMRC was doing their massive campaign, you know, 150 news stories, he was the only musical
artist that pushed back in any concerted way.
Why do you think that was?
I mean, he seems to think that most other artists are just chicken shit and they don't want to be
seen as political. And a lot of them just simply underestimated that this would go anywhere,
partly because, you know, it's a bunch of Washington wives and nothing's going to happen.
It is interesting actually that like, you know, Madonna, Prince, Cindy Loper, like big artists
were being targeted by this. They didn't do any of the pushback. And so Frank Zappa was kind of like
a one man fight back against the PMRC machine. Like he started putting out open letters.
He would publish like full page ads and newspapers.
This is what I mean about how big the shift to like Twitter and social media is like because
that we it's really hard to go back to remember what it was like when like you could not hear
directly from celebrities. Like you didn't have that ability and they didn't have that ability.
And you could just go months without hearing from like a massively famous artist. Like if they
didn't want to put out a statement, they would just not be heard from.
Yeah, you could be like, I wonder what Catherine Ochsenberg is up to. And then you just wouldn't know.
And so we are going to watch a clip of Frank Zappa testifying. Yay.
Here we go. Three, two, one, go.
The PMRC proposal is an ill conceived piece of nonsense which fails to deliver any real benefits
to children and fringes the civil liberties of people who are not children and promises to keep
the courts busy for years dealing with the interpretational and enforcemental problems
inherent in the proposal's design. It is my understanding that in law First Amendment issues
are decided with a preference for the least restrictive alternative. In this context,
the PMRC demands are the equivalent of treating dandruff by decapitation.
No one is forced Mrs. Baker or Mrs. Gore to bring Prince or Sheena Easton into their homes.
Thanks to the Constitution, they are free to buy other forms of music for their children.
Apparently, they insist on purchasing the works of contemporary recording artists in order to
support a personal illusion of aerobic sophistication. Ladies, please be advised, the $8.98 purchase
price does not entitle you to a kiss on the foot from the composer or performer in exchange for
a spin on the family Victrola. That was great. I love Frank Zappa. Right? I do think that having
some kind of indication that there's going to be scary, sweary stuff in an album is a good idea,
and we did end up with that. But also this idea that if you purchase any media in the world without
research or foresight and then listen to it, and it shocks your sensibilities that you have the right
to squeeze the artist out of a livelihood or something like that, that is a very insidious
point of view, and we can see it growing in the American mind at this stage. Totally. Certainly,
it's stronger and weirder now. Oh yeah. It's also fascinating that this whole thing comes
up because Tipper Gore accidentally buys Purple Rain for her 11-year-old daughter, as Frank Zappa
points out in his memoir, but not in his Senate testimony. Prince was already an extremely
controversial musical artist whose sexually explicit lyrics had been the subject of like
protests and stuff for years. Yeah. So the idea of just like, I innocently bought Purple Rain,
it's like Purple Rain is an R-rated movie. If Tipper Gore had done any work at all,
she easily could have found out that that was not appropriate for an 11-year-old.
I don't know. It's interesting too because like kids kind of know what they're bothered by,
and adults could kind of figure that out by asking them, but like there's no indication in this story
that like the daughter was disturbed. You could find lots of stories about kids being terrified
by media that they encounter, but probably not a lot of it is Madonna lyrics because how scary can
a Madonna song really be? Exactly. He also brings up the like sort of logistics of children getting
this music because everything that's on the radio is already censored, right? Like the radio has a
completely different set of standards. The only sort of explicit stuff that kids can really have
access to is what they buy at a record store. And then it's like, well, what 11-year-old has
their own money to go into a record store by themselves? I mean, an 11-year-old could, I think,
reasonably have the money for like one album. So if we're worried about like the random rich kids
who are able to go into a record store and buy like the works, right? These kids probably also
have access to Quailudes or whatever. So we just keep concerned about that. I mean, what I feel like
Citizen Zappa is expressing is that like, this is not about like, I have no choice but to buy
Sheena Easton records, but this idea that like something is popular that I don't like and that
is bad and I don't want it. Yes. And it's like, well, sorry. Yeah. Yeah. Frank Zappa also makes
a point that I feel like has gotten overlooked in all of this. He's talking about this sort of
specific rating system that they want, you know, V for violence, etc. He doesn't put this in like
the best terms. What he says is, the establishment of a rating system voluntarily or otherwise opens
the door to an endless parade of moral quality control programs based on things certain Christians
do not like. What if the next group of Washington wives demands a large yellow J on all material
written or performed by Jews in order to save helpless children from exposure to concealed
Zionist doctrine? And an L for material made by lasers. Two space lasers, of course.
But like, I mean, you're never supposed to make Nazi references. We all know about
Godwin's law, etc. But the Church of Satan is a real religion. There are people who identify
as pagans. And Wiccans. Yes. So if you have an O on a record, you're literally warning Americans
that the content of a specific religion is contained on this album, like not a great road to go down
as a country. That is a great point. Because then that's, you know, that is just American
government having to come out and admit like, we can't say I love Satan, because then actual Satan
will grow stronger. Actual Satan. And it's like, are we constructing our choices as a nation around
what will or will not empower the literal Satan who we all agree to believe in based on this?
Who walks among us? Yes. Yeah. Frank Sapa also points out the real reason for the hearing. Do you
want to hear this? Yes. So the actual context for this hearing is that parallel to all of this music,
lyrics, bullshit nonsense, the record companies are lobbying Congress for a blank tape tax.
Okay. Which is exactly what it sounds like. Yeah, it's a tax on blank tapes.
So we have completely forgotten about this, but the entire movie and recording industry
freaked out with the introduction of cassette players and VCRs. Because all of a sudden,
you could record movies from TV and you could record songs from the radio. But they didn't
realize that the average American is either too lazy or too confused to program a VCR and that's
because of how things went for 20 years. So Universal Studios actually sued Sony over this.
It was called the Betamax case. So in 1984, the year before these hearings, the Supreme Court ruled
that it was fine for TV broadcasts, but we still didn't have a clear ruling on recording music.
So at the time that this is happening, the House is debating Bill HR2911, which this is nuts,
which would charge manufacturers of cassette players one cent per minute for blank cassettes.
And do you know dual cassette tapes like boomboxes that would have two and you could record from one
tape to another? Yeah. Those would have a 25 percent surcharge on top of them.
Oh my god, this is shameless. It's so shameless, dude. And the recording industry would have gotten
$250 million a year from this tax. Four of the senators who are at the committee hearing
are also on the committee that is working on the blank tape tax. There's no clear smoking gun,
but it's very clear that the record companies were like, uh, we need all of these senators
to do us a solid later in the year. Their wives are campaigning against us. So like, why don't we
just cave to their wives and then come back to them and be like, hey, we helped you out with
that whole wife thing. So could you help us out on this blank tape thing? Wow. It's the perfect crime.
Yes. And one thing Frank Zappa points out is that Congress is considering doing something
extremely unpopular, right? Putting like making cassette tapes much more expensive. And so
what's a good way to distract the public from the very unpopular thing you're about to do that's
going to be a giveaway to these massive already rich record companies? Have a hearing about
Pornrock, like talk about masturbating with a magazine. Yeah. I mean, you know, the PTA was
lobbying on this beforehand and like, I don't think Tipper like knew about it. Like, I think
it's much less conspiratorial than Frank Zappa says that it is. And because it's already kind of hard
to interest people in issues around like manufacturing taxes, tariffs, copyright law,
like these are all the phrases that immediately bore people. Exactly. Even if it affects their
lives directly and they end up being blood dry. Yeah. Yeah. So next celebrity guest,
do you know who this is? That middler. Actually, not super far off. So we have testimony from
Frank Zappa and later we'll have D Snyder, the lead singer of Twisted Sister. And in between,
we have John Denver. What? Yes. Why? I feel like this would be someone who like Tipper Gore is the
least interested in censoring of almost anyone. Yeah, exactly. So I think they did this strategically
because they have like two rockers, right? They have Frank Zappa and they have D Snyder.
And in between, they wanted somebody who's like one of the good artists. A guy with normal hair.
Yeah. And who's going to be like I too am really sick of this heavy metal stuff. I have kids. I am
disgusted by all of this too. Like they wanted both sides. I am endeavoring to rock as well.
Yes. But not like that. To give you a sense of how loved John Denver was at the time, John Denver
couldn't stay for the entire hearing because right after his testimony, he had to go to NASA
to interview to be the first musician in space. So here is a clip of his testimony.
Good looking guy. Okay. Good looking guy. Three, two, one, go.
I'm here to address the issue of a possible rating system in the recording industry.
Labeling records where excesses of explicit sex or graphic violence have occurred.
And furthermore, references to drugs and alcohol or the occult are included in the lyrics.
These hearings have been called to determine whether or not the government should intervene
to enforce this practice. Mr. Chairman, this would approach censorship. I'll be very clear that I'm
strongly opposed to censorship of any kind in our society or anywhere else in the world.
I've had in my experience two encounters with a sort of censorship. My song,
Rocky Mountain High, was banned from radio stations as a drug related song. This was obviously done
by people who've never seen or been to the Rocky Mountains and also had never experienced the elation,
the celebration of life or the joy in living that one feels when he observes something as wondrous
as the perceived meteor shower on a moonless and cloudless night when there are so many stars that
you have a shadow from the starlight. And you're out camping with your friends, your best friends,
and introducing them to one of nature's most spectacular light shows for the very first time.
Obviously a clear case of misinterpretation. Mr. Chairman, what assurance have I that any
national panel to review my music would make any better judgment? Oh, I love how he's blaming
ignorance of Colorado. He's like, I know what you need. You need a little mind vacation. Isn't that
lovely? Oh, I loved that. I really loved that. I love that. No, I love Con Denver. I got it.
You know my thing that I get the most moved when someone is given the opportunity to be pitted
against somebody else and they don't take it. Yeah. Hey, sweetie, guess what? Bad news. Your
boyfriend is cheating on you with me. Yes. This makes my heart so full. And so it's very clear
that they invited John Denver on to talk shit on heavy metal, and he just didn't take them up on
it. He's like, nope, that's a form of creative expression. I love it. He literally compares
this effort to the Nazis at one point. I think what they don't realize is that John Denver
was D. Snyder 15 years ago. Exactly. Because he had longer than collar length hair,
and he sang about feelings. Yes. And I also, I just really love that he goes on for so long
with this little tangent about camping, and he could have just been like, obviously, they had
never been to the Rocky Mountains, and he could have just continued, but he was like, let me tell
you, you look at these people sitting in this crowded, like relatively small room, really,
and you're just like, thank you, John Denver. It feels like he's offering everyone's
fevered brain a little sip of water. He's such a glorious normie. Yeah. He ends his testimony
with, we can end hunger. We can rid the world of nuclear weapons. We can learn to live together
as human beings on a planet that travels through the universe, living the example of peace and
harmony among all people. Probably not in the PMRC hearings, though. Probably not today, but
it's a nice thought for him to end with. It's like, okay. It is really great. Yeah. He's
sort of coming up and being like, listen, you hired John Denver, and you are getting John Denver.
I also love it. So both Frank Zappa and D. Snyder say in their memoirs that they had no idea what
John Denver was going to say. Yeah. So they are backstage at this hearing, jumping up and down
and hugging like, yes, Denver coming through. Oh, what if they had after this formed a traveling
Wilbury's like super group, D. Snyder, Frank Zappa and John Denver.
Okay. So now we're going to watch the opposite of the John Denver testimony. So we're going to
watch a bunch of clips from the D. Snyder testimony because his is the longest and
potentially most interesting, but I feel like we have to just watch his entrance because it's
incredible. I'll bet we do. He says in his memoir that the reason why he didn't wear a suit wasn't
as some sort of statement. It's because he literally didn't own a suit. Why would you and
then if you buy one special for this, then it's like they're winning. Yeah, then you have one.
Okay. Three, two, one, go. Oh, yeah. D. fucking Snyder. Oh my God. I know he didn't own a suit,
but he probably did own something more professional than like a tank and a denim vest.
Ah, now he's taken off the denim vest. He is just poured into this outfit. Yeah. He's like,
he's a big guy and he is just, you know, because very tight everything. He looks great. He does.
Also, the logistics of having hair that long, I just feel like it must get like caught indoors
all the time. Mr. Snyder, thank you for being here. Thank you for having me here.
I don't know if it's morning or afternoon. I'll say both. Good morning and good afternoon.
My name is D. Snyder. That's S-N-I-D-E-R. Is he from Long Island? I like to tell
a committee a little bit about myself. I'm 30 years old. I'm married. I have a three-year-old son.
I was born and raised a Christian and I still adhere to those principles.
Believe it or not, I do not drink. I do not smoke and I do not do drugs. I just like to look great.
I do play in and write the songs for a rock and roll band named Twisted Sister that is classified
as heavy metal. And I pride myself on writing songs that are consistent with my above-mentioned
beliefs. So, are you familiar with a song called Under the Blade by Twisted Sister?
Much of his testimony is about this song because it's one of Tipper's favorites.
So, okay. I'm going to send you a link. All right. You want to read some of it?
I sure do. Okay. Under the blade. A glint of steel, a flash of light. You know you're not going home
tonight. Be it jack or switch, doctors or mind. Know where to run, everywhere you'll find. You
can't escape from the bed you've made when your time has come. You'll accept the blade. You're
cornered in the alleyway. You know you're not alone. You know it's going to end this way. The
chill goes to the bone. Now here it comes, that glistening light. It goes into your side. The
blackness comes. Tonight, the night. The blade is going to ride. It's funny how like even you know
the most like allegedly menacing songs when he just read the lyrics with no music they just all
sound like a long fellow basically. Yes, exactly. So, what does that say to you? Like what do you
think this song is about? I don't know. Like is it about mugging someone maybe? So, to tipper.
To tipper, this is a song about sadomasochism. Oh. Like BDSM. I definitely didn't get that. I mean
if you want to find it you can find it but like there's stuff in there about sort of like a bright
light is in your eyes. Yeah. And like your hands are strapped and like I don't. Right. I don't think
a bright light is like a BDSM thing. Right. That's like an interrogation thing is what that makes
me think of. You're cornered in the alleyway you know you're not alone. I mean I just feel like
yeah I'm not part of that scene but I don't feel like people corner each other in alleyways that
much as a you know submissive or a bondage thing. So, the thing that Dee Snyder says in his testimony
that gets him super duper shouted at is he says as the creator of under the blade I can say
categorically that the only sadomasochism bondage and rape in the song is in the mind of Miss Gore.
People freak out. Well if you didn't write it you're allowed to say that you didn't write it.
Seriously like if I write a novel and then there's like a senate hearing that's like
Miss Margell is trying to tell America's youths to do this thing and I you know I have the right
to be like excuse me. Yes. Art is based on interpretation and you can like get a message
out of a piece of art that the author didn't put there and like that's kind of a universally
accepted concept like he can put it more delicately but like why bother. Yes I keep thinking of the
thing in Parks and Recreation where Rashida Jones goes to speed dating and she's like trying to
ask how it works and the lady is like are you asking me how to flirt with men? Like this is
are you asking me how to listen to music? You can't just say to somebody like your song is about
this. A lot of people think you can though. I guess so. So okay we are going to watch Al Gore
skillfully interrogate Dee Snyder about the real meaning of this song. Nice oh my god I feel like
this is a dream I've had. Are we god really? This is amazing. Okay here it comes. I'm aware that
Frank Zappa and John Denver cover quite a spectrum and I do enjoy them both. I am not however a fan
of Twisted Sister and I will readily say that. Mr. Snyder what is the name of your fan club? The
fan club is called the SMF friends of Twisted Sister. And what does SMF stand for when it's
spelled out? It stands for the sick motherfucking friends of Twisted Sister. Is this also a
Christian group? I don't believe that profanity has anything to do with Christianity.
Point to Mr. Snyder. In Surge you say your song under the blade is about surgery.
Have you ever had surgery with your hands tied and your legs strapped? The song was written
about my guitar player Eddie Ojeda. He was having polyps removed from his throat and he was very
fearful of this operation and I said Eddie while you're in a hospital I'm going to write a song for
you. I said it was about the fear of operations. I think people imagine being helpless on a table,
the bright light in their face, the blade coming down on them and having totally afraid that they
may wake up who knows dead handicapped. It's a certain fear of hospitals. That's what that's
in my imagination what I see the hospitals like. Is there a reference to the hospital in the song?
No there isn't but there isn't a reference to a woman, say no masochism or bondage yes I'm sorry.
There's just a reference to someone whose hands are tied down and whose legs are strapped down
and he's going under the blade to be a cut. Yes there is. All right so it's not really a wild
leap of the imagination to jump to the conclusion that that's about something other than surgery
or hospitals neither of which are mentioned in the song. No it's not a wild jump and I think
what I said in one part was that songs allow a person to put their own imagination, experiences
and dreams into the lyrics. People can interpret it many ways. Ms. Gore was looking for say no
masochism and bondage and she found it. Someone looking for surgical references would have found
it as well. Yeah. Boy how did this man fail to capture the love of the electorate? I'll never
understand it. Seriously. That's the sweetest thing I've ever heard. He wrote a song about his
bandmates. Paulus. I know. I would also say like Poix Snyder. Al Gore is like is there a reference
to a hospital in there? Yeah. It's like really dude like a song has to have a reference to a
hospital to be about doctors. And also it says the word doctor in it. Yes. I love how Dee Snyder
is just like well Senator Gore this is what songs are and then Al Gore is like oh right yeah that's
true. Oh my god. I also feel like if this was written as a BDSM song I feel like there would
have been like two verses about consent and like safe words. Yes. Nobody takes that shit
more seriously than fetishes. Yes and it would have been wildly beloved by BDSM people because
there's like never enough media about them and when it is it's about Madonna putting wax on
I feel like music is being represented by people who are like being very sharp
and also very human. Yes. And kind of representing like this is why we need music in the world.
Alright we have one more we have one more clip. This is another attempted roasting of Dee Snyder.
I'm so excited. This is Senator Rockefeller reacting to Dee Snyder saying that you know the
rape is in the mind of Tipper Gore or whatever. The vehemence with which you attacked Senator
Gore's wife I detected sort of a defensiveness somehow on your part sort of a lack of unsureness
of where you stand in this. Why would why did you feel it necessary to attribute some of the
qualities to her that you did. Why was that important to your testimony. First of all I wasn't
attacking Senator Gore's wife I was attacking a member of the PMRC. Okay I was too sad. Senator
Gore's wife by name. Her name is Tipper Gore isn't it. Yeah okay I didn't say the senator's wife I said
Tipper Gore. That was great. He's a very good representative for this. Yeah and also like
having I mean all of us have spent a lot of time I think in the last couple of years probably more
so than before like watching and hearing people being grilled and giving exactly this kind of
testimony and most people who actually work in government for a living like 90% of them I would
say do much worse than Dee Snyder who theoretically is not trained for this at all. Yes he only found
out about this hearing like days in advance. That's amazing. I also think it's so telling
that the senator is like how dare you attack his wife. Yes and then Dee Snyder's like uh
this is the head of a lobbying organization. Yes Dee Snyder reveals that he's capable of
understanding her is like operating here in a professional capacity. Yes and if we're all
here because of Al Gore's wife why are we here dude. Yeah she has entered a public debate about
an issue of national import it's okay to criticize her ideas. Like it's weird to then hide behind
like you were mean to my wife. You were mean to someone's wife. She's the head of an organization
and she's the wife and it's also like that it's insulting to Al Gore right. Yes even if you're
not taking her ideas seriously you're like hey don't say that about Al Gore's wife.
So after the rock stars we have some other boring stuff like the head of the PTA shows up the head
of the recording industry show like I'm skipping them all because they're it just boilerplate and
they don't really say anything interesting but at the end of the day they bring on two expert
witnesses who are like Sarah some of the most atrocious congressional testimony I've ever seen
and like I've seen some congressional testimony. You have. So the first person that goes is somebody
named Dr. Joe Stucey who's a professor of rock and roll history which sounds like okay he's going
to give us some like historical context. This is the fucking quote today's heavy metal music is
categorically different from previous forms of popular music. It contains the element of hatred
a meanness of spirit. Its principal themes are extreme violence, extreme rebellion, substance
abuse, sexual promiscuity and perversion and Satanism. I know personally of no form of popular
music before which has had as one of its central elements the element of hatred.
This was in Congress. Define hatred. I know. He also the only other thing about his
demented testimony that I'll mention is that he brings up as if it's real subliminal messages.
Oh yeah. So he says that like there's all these satanic messages in the songs. Sometimes subaudible
tracks are mixed in underneath other louder tracks. These are heard by the subconscious mind but not
the conscious mind. Sometimes the messages are audible but are backwards called back masking.
There is disagreement among experts regarding the effectiveness of subliminals. We need more
research on that. Nevertheless. Oh yeah. There's no evidence that this is true but anyway I'm just
going to read it into the record at a congressional hearing. This is what led me to want to start
doing the show in the first place was that you know my horror you know from childhood but like
there's a lot of things that just have persisted as ideas people have just because
self-proclaimed experts have gotten up in public and confidently sworn to the existence of something
that they have no ability to swear to the existence of. They're just saying stuff. People just come
up and say stuff and then somebody writes it down and we're like oh it's written down. It must be
real stuff. Right. Like no. Yeah and back masking is you know it's a whole element of the satanic
panic too. Like one of the things that you can actually hear if you place stairway to heaven
backwards is you can hear the phrase here's to my sweet Satan. Nice. Which is just like I don't
know that song has a lot of words in it. It feels like it's kind of difficult to like if you're trying
to do a really good song because what that is it seems like it's adding another extraneous element
of difficulty to add a backwards message about Satan that no one's brain is capable of picking
up and even if Led Zeppelin did that and believed that that still doesn't mean that it's capable
of influencing anyone and even if it did they're just going to have the idea here's to my sweet
Satan in their heads which like okay. Also if this worked wouldn't we all be doing whatever
Missy Elliott was saying in that song where she talks backward in the chorus. I wish we were doing
whatever she was telling us to do. So second expert somebody named Dr. Paul King who is a
child psychologist who treats children with drug problems. One of his quotes you're gonna think
that I'm making this up. Okay. Young people in our treatment program recovering from drug problems
we do ask them to give up heavy metal for at least a year so they're not again overtaken
by feelings of resentment hate and the urge to party. That's a real quote. I can't believe that.
I can't believe that. It's like the dialogue you would write for like the cartoon evil dad in the
twisted sister video. Yes. The urge to party. That is funnier than any attempted parody of this
could be too. Seriously. This is why you know you realize that a lot of the good SNL sketches
are people just sort of repeating the news. Yeah. But also it's so funny that someone who works with
youths is like the urge to party comes externally into the child and it comes from the records
they're listening to and it's like I really think that heavy metal like disco the point is not the
content so much is like the place of emotional release that you get to which D. Snyder talked about.
Yes. And I mean if you want measured fact based testimony you call D. Snyder. Okay. If you want
someone to get up there and just wing it you call an expert witness. That's a very good way of putting
it. Okay. I got kind of obsessed with the question and I went down like a little bit of a research
rabbit hole because the fundamental question at the heart of these episodes and this hearing and
this moral panic is does music affect kids? So I tried to look into this and there's a sort of
a miniature little you're wrong about with a two layer debunking. You should work at shape any
something. The first layer is that Tipper Gore is actually right about heavy metal.
There is research very consistent research finding that kids who listen to heavy metal
have like higher rates of depression and like higher rates of aggressiveness.
Well yeah but can we say that the heavy metal is causing these things?
Well this is the thing. Yeah. So it's a very it's a very consistent correlation. There's been a
couple of attempts to find causality. So there's one study where they took sort of like a random
sample of people and then half of them they played classical music for and then the other
half they played heavy metal music for and they would give them these sort of personality tests
and the kids who heard heavy metal were like higher in aggressiveness and had like worse ideas
about gender after listening to heavy metal regularly. You know this is music that I think
is appealing if you have like some anger to deal with you know like if you had which all of us do
to some extent and if you just want to sort of be in your angry place or in your place of
aggression or release of those things then like yeah I do think it's that music is going to help
you be in that place. Yeah there is a real thing called the amplification effect where if you're
feeling sad and then you listen to sad music to try to sort of alleviate your sadness like
oftentimes people use the emotional content of music after they're feeling the emotion. It doesn't
cause the emotion right like you listen to angry music when you're already angry and then afterwards
you feel like you've had this like vicarious thrill. Yeah the blues famously are not a cause of
sadness. Yes but among certain kids that can actually amplify the feeling and keep them from
getting out of it and can actually be a way of sort of celebrating these negative emotions.
You can use music and other forms of entertainment to sort of fester a little bit.
Or you can find lyrics that validate this worldview or that expand upon it. Yeah.
But then what's very interesting about this is that Tipper Gore is right about heavy metal and
other forms of music that are sort of quote unquote aggressive but she's wrong, dead wrong,
about lyrics. Interesting. So one of the most interesting things about that study where they
compared classical music to heavy metal, they didn't just compare classical music to heavy
metal, they compared classical music to normal heavy metal to Christian heavy metal which has
like super normie lyrics right? It's like growling about the Bible and the same thing happened. The
kids got more aggressive, they had worse ideas about gender. Yeah and the Bible famously has
great ideas about gender. I know it's weird. But so this is kind of obvious but the way that
music affects you is how it feels. It's not about the explicit lyrics of the songs. Right.
So one of the really interesting musicology articles that I read said that one of the most
dangerous songs for this sort of amplification effect is something like All By Myself or Everybody
Hurts. These songs that are about breakups that are about romantic rejection which is the number
one precipitating cause of suicide especially for teenagers, that it's a way of just feeling
like no one's ever going to love me again. I'm ugly, I'm not worth loving. These are ideas that
people really wallow in. When I was young I never needed anyone. Yes, these songs really can sort of
feed into people's existing predispositions to depression or predispositions to catastrophize
something that's happening to them but none of those songs contain you should kill yourself lyrics.
And also if you believe in this effect, if you think that this is the way that music affects us,
then you have to ban all of the sad songs. You have to ban all of the heavy metal regardless
of its actual content which is deranged. And then you just end up in the musical world of the
patients and one flew over the cuckoo's nest which famously was great for them. And also it's not
even a new music thing because from the time that we have been able to record music on
discs, we have been recording things to make us feel sad or to allow us to sort of dig deeper
into feeling sad. This is complicated because we're getting technology involved but I think
that feeling sad is a human right. And also writing a song about a bad breakup and how you
felt afterwards is also a human right. All by myself is a jam. That's a great song. I'm not
comfortable banning probably the majority of music has the potential to make someone sad.
I mean, we have to throw away all Amy Mann at that point and I don't want to live in a war. If
Amy Mann is wrong, then I don't want to be right. But it's just a weird thing that it's like Tipper
never thought through the implications of the work that she is doing, right? That if she actually
believes what she's saying that it's causing teen pregnancy and causing violence, it's causing sad
moods, etc. Then it's like, Tipper, we got to shut down all the music. Yeah. And I feel as if that
comes down to this place of like, well, yes, that's true. But we're going to go ahead and try and
restrict heavy metal because I don't like it. Yes. I also think that so many of our political
beliefs are just trying to backfill our aesthetic judgments. Yeah. You listen to a Venom song or
Motley Cruse song and you're like, this fucking sucks. And then you have to build this whole
worldview about like, no, no, it doesn't just suck because that's my preference for music.
Yeah. It's, oh, it's bad for the kids and his bad lyrics and like, it's harming everybody and
it's demonic. And it's like, no, you just don't like it. It's fine. Yeah. And like Newsflash,
your kids don't like your stupid music, but you don't see them trying to get it banned.
The other nail in the coffin of Tipper's argument about how music lyrics are bad is there's actually
very comprehensive literature that indicates that no one listens to the lyrics of songs.
Yeah. So like, there's a really good study from 1984 where they asked kids about their
favorite song, like name your three favorite songs. 37% of the kids could not say what their
favorite song is about. People don't know what people are saying in music. The only reason I
know what my favorite songs are about is because they're all about being cheated on by Lindsay
Buckingham. There's a really good part of the article where they're talking about sort of
asking kids like, what is your song about? And all of them just repeat the title of it.
So they're like, what is like a virgin about? And the kids are like, it's about a virgin.
Okay. They ask the kids what stairway to heaven is about. And one of them says it's about going
to heaven through a stairway and the stairway has problems along the way.
And that's why the song is so long because if it were a functioning stairway, it would be short.
And to be fair, I have no idea what that song is about. So like, maybe it's about that.
It's about a bustle in the hedge row. There's also, there's actually interviews from the 80s
where they ask kids about Satanism, like kids views on Satanism and kids views on heavy metal.
The kids are saying much more sophisticated things about Satanism than any of the adults
are where the kids are like, well, it's obviously an affectation. Part of it is to sell records.
And what they're really talking about is a connection with sort of like the otherworldly
and the occult and sort of like the afterlife. They're not really talking literally about Satan.
And so I'm not taking that meaning from the song. It's like, can some adults please repeat
some of this guys? Yeah, I think the problem with the way that adults speculate about teenagers is
that like, I think adults really tend to project all the elements of themselves that like they
remember from when they were young and all the things that make them cringe about who they used
to be and who they still are. And they just like they don't see the teenager, they see just this
ball of their own insecurities. And they just assume they're talking about someone who's like
really dumb and not thoughtful and just has nothing going on mentally. And really like the
kids are obviously most of the time better at talking about their own lives because they're
the ones living them and they are human beings. Yes. So are you ready for the aftermath? Yeah,
I am. This is the epilogue. I'm feeling epilogy. So six weeks after the hearing, the record industry
basically caves and in exchange for Tipper Gore holding off on any more press for one year,
the record industry agrees to those silly little stickers that we all saw on albums in the 1990s.
And then we all ignored them forever. Well, this is this is what's very interesting is
between 1986 and 1989, only 49 albums get them. Oh, really? Yeah, because
every record company has a different standard for them. So like Bruce Springsteen gets one for
one of his albums, the Captain and Tennille get one. Really? The first album famously that comes
out with an explicit warning sticker is by Serge Gainsberg and all of the lyrics are in French.
I mean, that does make sense, though. He wrote really filthy stuff. There's this weird period
where like nobody is taking it seriously. But at the same time, what starts happening is exactly
what Frank Zappa and everybody else predicted would happen. So states start passing laws
that kids have to show ID to buy records with the warning label on them. And huge record chain,
so famously Walmart says that it won't sell any record with the sticker on it. Oh, man.
This was the whole thing that Tipper Gore refused to reckon with during her entire campaign. I've
seen a bunch of interviews with her where people ask her about this. Like, well, aren't you afraid
that once you start labeling records, massive stores will stop selling them? And she's like,
oh, we're not interested in that. All we're concerned about. We just want there to be information
for parents. We're only interested in the idea, not any of its implications or consequences.
Yes. There's also a bunch of efforts like this starts in San Antonio, but a bunch of other cities
pass straightforward censorship laws against live shows. Oh. Tipper even mentions this in her book,
and she's like, oh, well, that doesn't count as censorship because it's not federal. Well,
okay. No one said it had to be federal, Tipper. And so the way that we get these like much more
widespread stickers on everything is because states start proposing laws that will criminalize
any store that sells explicit records to kids. Wow. South Carolina passes a law that establishes
a $1 tax on any explicit album. And so after these laws pass the legislature, the PMRC,
to its credit, steps in and convinces the governors to veto these laws. Wow. Tipper Gore
actually sees like this is off the rails now. This is not what we intended. And so she shows up
at these legislative hearings and says like, no, no, you should not be doing this. This is too far.
This is not what we intended. Wow. She actually kind of tries to clean up the mess that she made.
Yes, which people don't typically do. Like, I really like that. But so the record industry
basically says, okay, we're now going to start taking this seriously and actually labeling
a much larger percentage of music. Stop all the downloading. This is also how we get the law in
Florida under which the two live crew obscenity case is filed. Oh, are we going to have an episode
about that too? Absolutely. Tipper is conspicuously absent from the gangster rap controversy of the
1990s. The reason turns out to be in 1988, Al Gore runs for president in the primary. He doesn't make
it but he's sort of now a presidential contender. And so apparently him and Tipper go to Hollywood
to get money from like big entertainment rich people who are going to fund their campaign
and nobody wants to give them donations because she led this big crusade. Who would have foreseen
that? Exactly. So the sort of the conspiracy theory explanation of this is the reason why
Tipper dropped all of this and quietly resigned from the PMRC is that this just wasn't palatable to
her husband's political ambitions. I feel as if this is something that initially made sense as
something for her to pursue because it seemed politically safe enough for a senator's wife.
So it's interesting that choosing the like mathematically most safe thing ended up being
something really alienating and damaging. I think a big reason is just that it became so
associated with the religious right eventually. I think that it sort of wasn't in 1985 when she
took it up but it got so bad and there were so many think-outs about this led by like the worst
people that it's like who's this democratic lady who basically started all of this? It's like she's
the one who bought the Mogwai. There's also a weird thing where it looks bad for Al Gore
that like his wife did stuff. Yikes. This is a line from the New Republic in the early 90s.
Having a wife who has made herself the Surgeon General of Rock and Roll makes Al Gore a faintly
ridiculous figure. In some subtle and no doubt deplorable way, it unman's him. What? So it's
seen as like emasculating that he had like an ambitious wife. She's like kept off the campaign
trail in 92. Like she never really recovered from this. We always talk about how everyone
hated Hilary but we never talk about how everyone hated Tipper Gore. Yeah. I mean it's funny because
like on the one hand Hilary Clinton to my knowledge never like waged a facile culture war against
Prince. I don't know maybe like if the public hadn't been so poisonously obsessed with either
of them or the role they played they could have done less ridiculous and highly scrutinized things
and everyone would have been happier. That's the thing. I like I fundamentally disagree with what
she did and like I think that her book is bad and I think that this had measurable negative
effects on the country but also it does seem weird that like other people have done much worse
things and are like still around. I just can't get over the fact but like she like was given this
very strict small space within which it was considered appropriate and non emasculating
for her to try and work politically and she actually did that and then that still was too much.
What's interesting to me is in a lot of the historiography around the PMRC it's seen as sort
of a joke right it's all these Washington wives they're using their Rolodexes but like it was an
extremely effective political campaign like they got exactly what they wanted. Too effective clearly.
Yes in less than six months they completely transformed the way the record industry worked
and the way that we regulated music like they opened a door to a completely different way
of legislating around artistic expression. Yeah I mean it really shows that if you stop women from
playing real roles in society we'll use all our pent up energy to do something kind of unnecessary
and weird. That's a pretty good lesson. So that's it. That was Tipper. That was Pornrock.
All right well G Tipper I guess I wish you could have done something less silly which I feel as if
you would have preferred yourself. Yes and you know all the stuff that she does now is like
homelessness and mental illness and stuff so. And no one gives a shit. Yeah I know nobody notices
anymore. Yeah well I guess I learned that a D Snyder is very good at whatever skill set you need
to give testimony before the Senate and I am a better person for knowing that. The only thing
that I learned is that the Rocky Mountains are beautiful this time of year. We should go camping.