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Billyman
12-12-2004, 07:09 PM
Almost, kinda……not really. :rolleyes:


Wal-Mart Sued Over Evanescence Lyrics

HAGERSTOWN, Md. -- Wal-Mart Stores Inc., which promotes itself as a seller of clean music, deceived customers by stocking compact discs by the rock group Evanescence that contain the f-word, a lawsuit claims.

The hit group's latest CD and DVD, "Anywhere But Home," don't carry parental advisory labels alerting potential buyers to the obscenity. If they did, Wal-Mart wouldn't carry them, according to the retailer's policy.

But the lawsuit claims Wal-Mart knew about the explicit lyrics in the song, "Thoughtless," because it censored the word in a free sample available on its Web site and in its stores.

The complaint, filed Thursday in Washington County Circuit Court, seeks an order requiring Wal-Mart to either censor or remove the music from its Maryland stores. It also seeks damages of up to $74,500 for each of the thousands of people who bought the music at Wal-Marts in Maryland.

"I don't want any other families to get this, expecting it to be clean. It needs to be removed from the shelves to prevent other children from hearing it," said plaintiff Trevin Skeens of Brownsville.

Skeens said he and his wife, Melanie, let their daughter buy the music for her 13th birthday and were shocked when they played it in their car while driving home.

Wal-Mart, of Bentonville, Ark., has no immediate plans to pull the CDs from its shelves, spokesman Guy Whitcomb told The (Hagerstown) Herald-Mail. He said the company will investigate the allegations. No hearing dates have been set.

"While Wal-Mart sets high standards, it would not be possible to eliminate every image, word or topic that an individual might find objectionable," Whitcomb told the newspaper.

He told the Herald-Mail that the song sample online was censored by Walmart.com, a separate division of Wal-Mart.

Whitcomb didn't return telephone calls Friday from The Associated Press.

The lawsuit also names as defendants Wind-up Records LLC, the New York-based company that recorded the music and decided not to apply parental-advisory stickers; and distributor BMG Entertainment, a subsidiary of Sony BMG Music Entertainment, of New York.

Sony BMG declined to comment on the lawsuit. Wind-up didn't return calls from the AP.

The Skeens' lawyer, Jon D. Pels of Bethesda, said he aims to "take this case national, even if that means going state by state."

He dismissed Whitcomb's suggestion that Wal-Mart stores didn't know about the censored version of the song. "They are a multimillion-dollar corporation and they certainly can communicate among their various entities," he said.
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To all those involved from Maryland...........go "f" yourselves.

Cruise Director
12-12-2004, 07:41 PM
Since when did it become anybody's responsibility to raise your kids besides your own? Growing up, my parents knew exactly what I was and was not listening to. I remember having a bootleg copy of Eddie Murphy which was found and confiscated by my mom on a room search. Yes, I did say room search. Parents should go through a child's room and see what's up. At the time I felt all my rights were violated. I have since discovered that my rights didn't really begin until I left the nest. I didn't say when I turned '18' because I really feel that as long as you live under your parents' roof, you have no right to privacy.

A few years ago my neice wanted a CD for christmas that I promptly went out and bought for her. I took it home, opened it and listened to it. I deemed that the content and lyrics were a little too mature for her and returned the CD to the retailer. The clerk looked at me like I had a 3rd eye when I explained why I was returning an opened CD. It took quite a bit of discussion between me and the manager but I finally received store credit to purchase something a little more appropriate for her.

Asmodeus
12-12-2004, 10:30 PM
2 thumbs up for Cruise.

And Maryland- see what Billyman said.

What happened to parents taking action? What happened to parents actually caring what happens to their kids?

Oh yea...*smacks head* that's right- kids are secondary... well not really that. But, I will see what my son or daughter is doing and watching and smoking and fucking just as soon as *insert whichever reality pogram you watch religiously here* is over.

My folks did go thru my things growing up. I lived over it. My folks did let me listen to whatever I wanted to. I grant them that. But, they told me this, "If that kind of language leaves your mouth around us or at school, that WILL be the last time it does. Understand me?" Yes maam/sir. I sho doo.

Bah...