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SOCIETY FOR PROMOTION OF COMMUNITY STANDARDS INC.

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Into the River ban was in ‘public interest’, Dr Don Mathieson

September 13, 2015 by SPCS Leave a Comment

Complete freedom of expression is impossible in a society that also allows censorship, says the man who has singlehandedly shut down sales of teen novel Into the River.

Don Mathieson, president of the Film and Literature Board of Review, said an interim restriction order – which makes it a crime to supply, display or distribute the award-winning book – was “in the public interest”.

“I’m just applying an act of Parliament … It’s impossible to have complete 100% freedom of expression and any form of censorship of written materials and that’s the tension we all have to live with and if anybody hasn’t got the brains to see that, then, I’m sorry . . . ”

Mathieson, speaking publicly for the first time since he issued his restriction order, said he had read Into the River“sufficiently recently to have a detailed knowledge of it”.

“I can’t comment on the merits of the book. It may have considerable merit and the board will decide whether it has or not. But the question is not how good of a bit of literature it is, but how does the act apply to it?”

His ruling remains in place until the next full meeting of the Review Board, scheduled for October 2. [Read more…]

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Filed Under: Censorship, Film & Lit Board Reviews Tagged With: Don Mathieson, Family First, interim restriction, Into the River, NZ Post Children's Book Awards, Ted Dawes

BSA report on “C” word & decision by Deputy Chief censor Nicola McCully on NZ Post award book – Into the River

October 4, 2013 by SPCS Leave a Comment

In its September 2013 BSA Report, 70% of adult respondents rated the C### word as the most unacceptable word “in relation to the scenario of a television drama shown after 8.30 pm.” (i.e. “adult” viewing time). The quantitative research, a national online survey with 1,500 randomly selected individuals aged 18 years and over, stratified by region, age group, gender and ethnicity, was carried out by Nielson research company for BSA “to provide a monitor of the acceptability of the use of swear words, blasphemies and other expletives in broadcasting over time.” Since 2005 the “C###” word has consistently topped the BSA reports as the most offensive word – (thereby injurious to the public good),

This same “C###” word was used NINE TIMES in a self-published book – Into the River by Ted Dawe – which recently won two categories in the New Zealand Post Children’s Book Awards: Margaret Mahy book of the year and young adult [ages 14-18] fiction award (announced on 24 June 2013). The Office of the Chief Censor of Film and Literature, Dr Andrew Jack, recently classified this book as “Unrestricted – Suitable for mature audiences 16 years of age and over”, after it was submitted for classification as a result of complaints raised by Family First NZ, a registered charity. The 13 page Office of Film and Literature Classification (OFLC) decision on the book, signed by Deputy Chief Censor, Ms Nicola (Nic) McCully, stated FALSELY that the “C” word only appeared once in the book. The Office informed SPCS that it had been examined by a number of highly trained staff who had read it. The Decision (ref. no. 1300727.000) dated 11 September 2013 states on page 8:

“This book contains a limited amount of highly offensive language, …. The word ‘fu##’ and its derivatives are used occasionally and the word ‘cu##’ is seen once. The language is not likely to cause harm…. The highly offensive language has a relatively low impact due to the context.” [Note: Offensive words spelt in full in OFLC decision and BSA decision. Emphasis added in bold].

Why was the deputy chief censor Ms Nic McCully failed to ascertain that the most offensive word according to 70% of adult New Zealanders – the “C” word was actually used nine times in Ted Dawe’s highly controversial book? Why did she sign the OFLC decision which is based on false information? Has she become desensitised to the offensive nature of the “C” word and other obscene words due the length of time she has been in the job? What real qualifications does she have to make determinations on the appropriatness of language in children’s books? Is there a link between the sexual orientation of censors and the attitudes/judgment they display towards the excessive use of the “C” and “F” words in children’s literature” or elsewhere?

The Deputy Chief Censor Ms Nicola McCully was appointed by the Governor-General on the recommendation of the Minister of Internal Affairs.

“The reappointment of Ms McCully will retain her significant expertise in the area of censorship and will ensure the continued solid performance of the Office of Film and Literature Classification,” said Hon. Nathan Guy.

Ms McCully was originally appointed as Deputy Chief Censor on 17th September 2002 on the recommendation of a former Minister of Internal Affairs, Hon. George Hawkins, with the concurrence of the Minister of Justice, Hon. Phil Goff, and the Minister of Womens Affairs, Hon. Laila Harre. She has been reappointed to successive three year terms of office, in 2002, 2005, 2008, and 2011. Her latest term expired on 2 August 2012. She has been viewing hardcore porn and objectionable content that degrades, demeans and dehumanises women in particular, as a deputy chief censor for over 11 years!

Prior to Ms McCully’s appointment, she had worked in the Classification Office for eight years which included her role as Classification Unit Manager and Senior Classification Officer. She was also previously an examiner for the Video Recordings Authority in 1994. Prior to that the only employment experience she had was working for one year with special needs children as a teacher aide, a job she got without any teacher qualifications (e.g. Dip. Tchg.) or specialist training certificate.

In total Ms Nicola McCully has been viewing hardcore porn and objectionable content as a censor for almost 20 years!

This “dirty job” (see quote below) that has commanded a gross salary of about $200,000 and which she apparently must enjoy so much, was described in an article available published on line by Sex Shops in New Zealand On Line (see below):

http://www.sexshops.co.nz/

In a typical working week, Nicola McCully might watch a couple of dozen people having sex. Sometimes they might be doing this in twos or threes; other times, there’ll be a roomful, going at it like rabbits. Sometimes they might be going at it with rabbits. And if it’s not sex, it’s violence. McCuly looks on as people are murdered, tortured and maimed. Soft human bodies are set on fire, exploded by bombs, cut up and eaten. McCully might crunch her way through a tangy apple as a young man is slowly and gleefully decapitated. Other times a cup of tea might wet the whistle during a gruelling group rape scene. A gingernut with that? Sure, why not? It’s all in a day’s work for McCully, as New Zealand’s deputy chief censor.

For the last 10 years or so, she has spent her working week viewing all manner of distressing and depraved things to decide whether we can watch them as well.

Censorship. It’s a dirty job, and somebody has to do it. But who? What could possibly drive someone to be a censor? Not the money, that’s for sure. The salary for an experienced classification officer is less than $60,000. So why would someone voluntarily sit in a darkened room for days, months, years of their life, watching acts of extreme cruelty, harrowing sexual violence and the more repulsive ends of the porn spectrum?

McCully began her censorship career in 1994. After working in special education in Christchurch, she applied for a job at the Video Recordings Authority, an organisation that was amalgamated into the Classification Office that same year. A compact, quick-witted woman with a habit of getting straight to the point, McCully’s career choice means she has seen things no-one should have to see. She acknowledges that some aspects of her job have taken their toll emotionally. Certainly, her ready laugh is at odds with her sad eyes.

“Some days this work really is the pits. You see some incredibly horrible things. If there’s a court case concerning the sexual exploitation of young children, we spend weeks dealing with images that are genuinely grotesque. We’ve had computer hard drives submitted to us containing entire libraries of child pornography, with thousands of images and movie files that have been indexed and arranged like photo albums.”

Fortunately, cases as grim as this are relatively rare. McCully estimates that about 80% of her team’s work is classifying the kind of sexually explicit DVDs that will end up in sex shops and the “adult” sections of video stores from North Cape to Bluff.

“Those tapes really are tedious,” she sighs. “You might have six hours of sex DVDs to classify, and you have to watch them from beginning to end. There’s no fast-forwarding, in case you miss a section where things are verbally or physically rough. The misogyny in these sex tapes is very depressing. There’s the underlying idea that women are only on this earth to satisfy men in whatever way those men want to be satisfied, no matter how painful or humiliating.”

____

Returning to the September 2013 BSA report. It states:

31 words were presented to respondents, all of which are included in the 2010 survey

  • Respondents rated eight words as Totally or Fairly unacceptable in relation to the scenario of a television drama shown after 8.30pm: C### (70%), Ni##er (65%), Mother f##### (61%), J#### F###### C##### (61%), C###sucker (56%), Get f##### (54%), F### off (50%) and F### (50%). The least contentious words, rated as Totally or Fairly acceptable, were: Bloody (15%), Bollocks (13%) and Bugger (13%). The order of the words found to be the most offensive to the least offensive remains largely the same as found in 2010 and in 2005 [Note: Offensive words spelt in full in BSA report]

See: http://bsa.govt.nz/publications/research/123-2013/6367-what-not-to-swear-the-acceptability-of-words-in-broadcasting-2013

Words such as C###sucker, and “Fa##ot”” are of particular concern to GayNZ.com which states:

“Two homophobic slurs are among the top ten words New Zealanders find most offensive on radio or TV.

“C###sucker” is the word ranked fifth most unacceptable in an annual Broadcasting Standards Authority survey. “Fa##ot” ranks ninth.” [Words spelt in full in GayNZ report]

No mention is made by GayNZ.com staff of the “C” word in their erudite media release “Gay slurs not welcome on NZ radio or TV” which comes with a nifty warning note: “Content warning”

Other Sources:

1. Nathan Guy’s Media Release:http://www.beehive.govt.nz/release/deputy+chief+censor+reappointed

2. Briefing for Incoming Minister Internal Affairs. Department of Internal Affairs June 2009, p. 58.

“An appointment process for the Deputy Chief Censor is underway and is in the final stages.”

3. Report of the Office of Film and Literature Classification for year ending 30 June 2008

Employee Remuneration p. 55. Also see Annual Report 2007, p. 70.

http://www.censorship.govt.nz/pdfword/Annual%20Report%202008.pdf

4. https://www.spcs.org.nz/2009/after-over-15-years-being-paid-big-bucks-by-the-tax-payer-to-watch-hardcore-adult-and-child-porn-and-sexual-violence-chief-censor-bill-hastings-and-his-deputy-nicola-mccully-want-a-further-3-years/

5. For more details on the OFLC classification of Ted Dawe’s book Into the River and the NZ Post Children’s Book Awards see pages 2-4 in the SPCS September 2013 Newsletter.

https://www.spcs.org.nz/wp-content/uploads/newsletters/SPCSNewsletterSept2013.pdf

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Filed Under: Broadcasting Standards Authority, Censorship, Obscenity Tagged With: BSA, censorship, Deputy Chief Censor, Dr Andrew Jack, Into the River, Margaret Mahy, Neilson research, Nic McCully, Nicola McCully, NZ Post Children's Book Awards, OFLC decision, Ted Dawe

Ted Dawe Should Be Stripped Of Prestigious NZ Post Children’s Book Award – says Sue Reid (bookseller, mother)

July 4, 2013 by SPCS 3 Comments

In a media release issued today Family First NZ, a registered charity, is

calling on NZ Post to strip author Ted Dawe of a prestigious award he received as best children’s author for his book Into the River. The media release states:

Book Should Be Stripped Of Prestigious Children’s Book Award – Mother

Review by Sue Reid from Masterton – a mother, bookseller, and previously a

columnist for the Wairarapa Times-Age.

As a parent and bookseller I was concerned to see Into the River by Ted Dawes win the recent NZ Post Children’s Book Award 2013. I have since read the book (from cover to cover) and I now enclose a review.

Devon (a.k.a. Te Arepa) is the central character of Dawes’ book. He lives on the East Coast of North Island NZ and experiences family / community dysfunction. At age 14 he goes to Auckland and attends a boarding school there. The school has a ‘pecking order’ of older students (not bullying) but graphic violent assaults carried out on the younger students. Fear and intimidations uphold the social order. It is here that the c-word is used extensively along with f-word (I don’t use these words personally and would certainly not be allowing my children or expect school students to use them, so why should I be reading them in a children’s book!)

Devon meets Steph (a boy) at this school and they become ‘allies-brothers-in-arms’ but Steph is harbouring secrets…and this is where the adult themes really take hold in the book. Steph is having an affair with his music teacher, Willie, along with having an affair with his father’s work colleague (who is a father himself). i.e. two separate paedophiles sexually abusing a 14 year old.

On a holiday back to East Coast, Devon has a graphic sexual encounter with young single mum (Tania) – twice…the second time whilst her young baby is in the room and who starts to mimic her mother’s sounds of arousal! (yet another scene normalising paedophilia.)

Back to school and Steph takes Devon to see their music teacher Willie during the weekend. Willie takes the boys to an isolated beach and they swim naked, then smoke a joint. The session finishes back at Willie’s house where the boys strip, and photos are taken of the boys (more sexual abuse)….these photos are added to a large pile of photos of naked boys.

Willie is one of the teachers that leads a school camp to Waiheke Island and both Steph and Devon are opportunistic to sneak graphic sexual encounters.

The teachers in ‘control’ of camp lead the students in drug taking of ecstasy (drug abuse) and ends with a night swim complete with naked teacher and student engaging in an incident of statutory rape (yet more sexual abuse). No teacher holds any student accountable and it is a vile misuse of a teacher’s position and power.

As a parent and as a bookseller, I feel that the week’s earlier comments in the media about the book were tame. This book is far worse than I ever imagined. It deals with graphic sexual content and paedophilia. Explicit descriptions of drug taking glorify the abuse of drugs, and there is the misuse of adult power and sinister manipulation of 14 year olds. I find these ‘themes’ abhorrent, and definitely not the content or style that suits a children’s book. The book won in the 13-plus age category but the book is “aimed at 15-plus”, but I would not suggest this book to a 15 year old. In fact, not to any school age person. Many adults would find it highly offensive and upsetting. Our children live in a highly sexualised, immoral environment – many commentators lament that fact, and yet here we have a repulsive, graphic book that offers nothing in the way of hope, inspiration or how to have a healthy personal relationship. All ‘hook-ups’ were based on animalistic drives…nothing else, and is void of any kinship.

The book should be stripped (pardon the pun) of this prestigious children’s book award.

PLEASE NOTE: Family First has made a complaint to Censorship Compliance at the Dept. Internal Affairs requesting the book to be classified.

We are also calling on NZ Post to withdraw the Award.

ENDS

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Filed Under: Moral Values Tagged With: Into the River, NZ Post Children's Book Awards, Ted Dawe

Graphic sexual content in winning children’s book defended by chief judge

July 3, 2013 by SPCS Leave a Comment

Detailed descriptions of sex acts, coarse language and scenes of drug-taking are at the heart of why a novel was voted the best children’s book of the year, the award’s head judge says.

Ted Dawe’s Into the River won the top honour at the annual New Zealand Post Children’s Book Awards.

However, its racy content has led one bookstore to refuse to stock it, and award organisers are sending “explicit content” stickers to all booksellers to warn potential buyers.

The book uses expletives including the c-word and depicts drug use and sex scenes, including one where a baby mimics the sounds of intercourse.

The chief judge of the awards, author Bernard Beckett, said Into the River was in the young adult category, for ages 14 to 18, and was aimed at those aged 15 and older.

The content that had offended some needed to be taken in context, he said….

Bob McCoskrie, of lobby group Family First, claimed the author and judges were out to “pollute the moral innocence of kids”.

“I think every New Zealand parent would be saying, ‘What were the judges thinking?’ This is an adult book that even adults would find offensive.”

For full story see:

Otago Daily Times

Graphic content in winning children’s book defended

http://www.odt.co.nz/entertainment/books/263125/graphic-content-winning-childrens-book-defended

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Filed Under: Moral Values Tagged With: Bernard Beckett, explicit content, Family First, Into the River, NZ Post Children's Book Awards, Ted Dawe, young adult category

NZ Post Judges and author “are out to pollute the moral innocence of kids” says Family First NZ

July 2, 2013 by SPCS 1 Comment

Family First NZ, a registered charity, has issued a media release calling on NZ Post to withdraw an award from a children’s book author

30 June 2013

Call for NZ Post To Withdraw Award From Book

Family First is calling on NZ Post to withdraw their support and the award from Ted Dawe’s Into the River book which won top prize in the annual New Zealand Post Children’s Book Awards

“This is an offensive and sexually explicit book which is completely inappropriate for young people, will be shocking to most New Zealand parents, and shows that the judges of the Awards have completely lost the plot,” says Bob McCoskrie, National Director of Family First NZ.

“We were shocked to see the graphic sexual nature of the book and the foul language, and horrified to know that it is now an ‘award-winning’ book being stocked in school libraries and targeted at young people.”

“I think every New Zealand parent would be saying ‘what were the judges thinking?’. We would also question the wisdom of the School Library Association for thinking that it might be appropriate. This is an adult book that even adults would find offensive. What other books does the Association think appropriate but parents wouldn’t?” says Mr McCoskrie.

“It appears that the author and also the judges are out to pollute the moral innocence of kids.”

Family First is calling on New Zealand Post to withdraw the award, and to avoid association with the Awards until the judges show better judgement.

END

Family First website

www.familyfirst.org.nz

Also see: Into the River wins top prize at NZ Post book awards

Published: 8:36PM Monday June 24, 2013 Source: ONE News

http://tvnz.co.nz/entertainment-news/into-river-wins-top-prize-nz-post-book-awards-5475178

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Filed Under: Moral Values Tagged With: Into the River, New Post Children's Book Awards, NZ Post Children's Book Awards, Ted Dawe

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