1. "Fuck are you lookin' at?"
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2. "I've had it
with these motherfuckin' snakes
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3. on this motherfuckin' plane."
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4. "Fuck you. Fuck you. Fuck you.
You're cool. Fuck you. I'm out."
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5. "You want me to go trash your lights?
You want me to fuckin' trash 'em?
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6. Then why are you trashing my scene?"
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7. "You are one ugly motherfucker."
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8. "You have insulted me
for the last fucking time."
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9. "Fuck you! That's my name."
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10. "Don't waste my motherfuckin' time."
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11. "Fuck it. We'll do it live."
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12. An actor's greatest tool
is their imagination.
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13. But swearing…
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14. is definitely up there.
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15. With swear words,
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16. we can cut, soothe, delight,
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17. frighten, insult, and seduce.
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18. Of all the swear words
in the English language,
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19. none is as malleable as "fuck."
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20. It's capable of expressing
the full range of human emotion.
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21. The pain, the wonder,
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22. the unlawful carnal knowledge,
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23. in a single syllable.
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24. Or we can say it like this…
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25. Fuuuuuck!
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26. They're the most popular
and alluring taboos we have.
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27. But the secrets to their strange power
have been shrouded in mystery.
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28. Until now.
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29. Join me on a journey through the history,
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30. evolution and cultural impact
of swear words.
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31. And let's get fucked.
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32. "Fuck" is the all-time classic.
Number one with a bullet.
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33. "Fuck" is another word
that helps you release frustration.
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34. It's— it's a word that conveys emotion.
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35. If I had only one swear word
to take with me to a desert island,
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36. it would probably be "fuck."
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37. My name is Kory Stamper.
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38. I am a lexicographer and an author.
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39. I used to write
dictionary definitions at Merriam-Webster,
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40. and, among other things,
my job there was to work on profanities.
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41. English, motherfucker. Do you speak it?
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42. I love the word "fuck" so much.
It's just so versatile.
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43. You can put it anywhere in a sentence,
and give it a little bit of zhuzh.
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44. My name is Ben Bergen
and I'm a cognitive scientist.
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45. I do research on language.
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46. You can use "fuck" in absolutely any way.
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47. I'll take you all to fuckin' hell.
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48. We say "fuck" all the time.
"What the fuck?"
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49. "You little fucker."
It could be a good thing.
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50. "Cheeky little fuck!"
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51. It can be used in compound nouns
like "fuckhead" and "fuckwit."
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52. When something's really impressive,
you go "Fuck!"
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53. If you use it one way,
you can offend people.
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54. "Fuck you, Jack!"
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55. Use it another way, you can make friends
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56. - and influence people.
- "Fuck, yes!"
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57. My name is Melissa Mohr
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58. I have a PhD from Stanford University,
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59. and I write about swearing.
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60. If you hear someone say "fuck,"
that word has— has a lot of power.
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61. It can work with when you're shocked.
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62. "Fuck!"
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63. It can work with when you're surprised.
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64. "Shut the fuck up!"
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65. "Fuck" is just
the most acceptable curse word,
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66. but it still is the worst one of all.
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67. But for all its myriad uses,
"fuck" is ultimately about fuck-ing.
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68. So, where did the word itself come from?
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69. With "fuck,"
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70. it has a really long history
of not meaning something related to sex.
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71. Thousands of years.
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72. And, starting right around
the beginning of the 14th century,
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73. it gained this new meaning related to sex,
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74. and probably preserved it
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75. without ever being a banned term
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76. for about 400 years.
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77. So, there's an acronymic etymology
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78. that people think
the word "fuck" came from a phrase,
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79. "Fornication Under Consent of the King."
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80. The idea is…
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81. …that when people
in the middle ages got married,
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82. they had to go to the king,
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83. they had to ask for permission
to have sex.
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84. Oh, don't stop!
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85. Oh, I'm almost thither!
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86. Halt this carriage!
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87. I'm almost thither!
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88. Almost!
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89. Cease this unsanctioned erogeny at once!
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90. If you didn't have papers
from the king, you were breaking the law.
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91. But, my lord, you've given your consent.
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92. Ah! Very well, then.
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93. Let it be known
that this household has been given
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94. my royal, kingly consent
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95. to fuuuuuck!
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96. Such a great story for such a great word.
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97. It is total horseshit.
It's not real. Sadly.
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98. Because we like colorful words
to have colorful origins.
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99. I think "fuck" is just made up.
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100. I feel like this one guy
one day just went, "Fuck."
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101. And the other guy was like, "Oh, I kinda…
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102. That's exactly how I feel, actually."
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103. The best that etymologists can tell,
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104. "fuck" probably comes
from a medieval Dutch verb,
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105. which means "to blow,"
"to hit,"to strike."
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106. What? "Fuck" means "to hit"?
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107. You can fuck someone up
by hitting them really hard.
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108. Technically,
it still hasn't lost its original meaning.
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109. So, if I got hit in the face,
I would get fucked in the face?
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110. Talking to them's an uphill struggle,
innit, Dad?
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111. Fuck off!
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112. "Fuck" doesn't appear
very often in language
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113. before the 1500s.
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114. But there are some uses of the word,
and they occur in people's names.
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115. So, there's a man called John Lefucker.
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116. Who was a known gigolo in the area.
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117. There's somebody Fuckbutter.
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118. Incredibly well endowed.
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119. Somebody Roger Fuckebythenavele.
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120. What? Are you crazy?
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121. It could refer to the fact that he is, um…
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122. an inelegant copulator.
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123. But it could also mean
that he got hit in the stomach.
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124. Or that he punches people in the stomach.
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125. We just— With names,
you don't really know,
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126. because they tend to be metaphorical, or—
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127. You know, nicknames
aren't necessarily explainable
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128. if you're outside of that in-group.
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129. A lot of people's last names
in English come from their profession,
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130. or some characteristic they're known by.
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131. So you've got a Taylor.
He would have sewn clothes.
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132. A Miller would have ground grain,
you know?
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133. So, you've got— In the 13th century,
you've got John Lefucker.
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134. What did he do? He—
You know, was he the original fuckboy?
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135. How many ways can we use "fuck"?
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136. There's so many different ways
to talk about "fuck."
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137. You have the Fuck Family Tree,
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138. where Fuck meets Motherfuck,
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139. and those two fuck
and they have a Fuccboi.
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140. He never gets married
because he's always fuckin' around,
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141. but he had a Fuckwad and a Fuck Nut
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142. with this absolute fuck fiend,
Fuckin' Brenda.
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143. They all fucked.
But the motherfucker's brother,
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144. Uncle Fucker, was a real sick fuck.
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145. But he put them in the will,
so the little fuckers run around
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146. with a fuck ton of money.
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147. Then, there's the other
fuckin' side of the family.
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148. They're all fuckin' dicks anyway.
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149. "Fuck" means "sex," for sure.
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150. And then you can move outward
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151. and say, well, "fuck" also refers
to really mess something up,
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152. or "fuck" meaning "to screw someone over."
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153. These are all metaphorical uses.
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154. And— and the fact that it's so taboo,
and has been taboo for a while,
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155. you know, it's kinda like Silly Putty—
you can stretch it
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156. into just about any meaning you need to.
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157. Where does "fuck"
live in your brain?
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158. When you automatically,
spontaneously swear,
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159. it's an evolutionary old reflex.
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160. Apparently, swear words live in,
like, a different part of your brain.
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161. They live in, like,
the mom's basement of your brain.
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162. And I'm goin'
to that part of my brain a lot.
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163. There's a deeper, more emotional,
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164. evolutionarily old place
that profanity comes from.
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165. Deep in the middle of the brain,
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166. a part of the brain
we share with other primates,
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167. with other mammals, with lizards.
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168. That's the part that leads you
to swear when you stub a toe,
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169. or when your favorite football team
scores a touchdown.
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170. If something is tragic,
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171. my reaction will involve the word "fuck."
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172. When you swear, you produce adrenaline.
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173. It's part of the same
fight-or-flight reaction people have
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174. when they experience fear or anger.
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175. It can cause
the listener's heart rate to increase,
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176. make your palms sweat.
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177. You fuckin' do that again
and I will shoot you myself.
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178. That adrenaline
and the blood flow to the extremities
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179. makes it easier to tolerate pain there.
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180. It's also the same reason
why swearing makes you stronger.
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181. For example,
five percent stronger in grip strength
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182. when you're swearing,
compared to when you're not.
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183. "Fuck!"
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184. It's so primal, so universal,
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185. that some of history's most famous people
channeled its power
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186. for their last words.
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187. Like beloved children's author Roald Dahl.
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188. "It's just that
I will miss you all so much."
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189. "Ow, fuck!"
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190. Or notorious people lover W. C. Fields.
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191. "God damn the whole fuckin' world
and everyone in it but you, Carlotta."
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192. And even Venezuelan freedom fighter,
Antonio José de Sucre.
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193. "Fuck, a bullet wound."
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194. Every single person who's fallen
off a cliff, their last word was "fuck."
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195. Everyone who's been eaten by a shark,
they also said "fuck."
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196. I'm not surprised.
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197. I feel like that's probably
a lot of people's last words.
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198. I'm Elvis Mitchel,
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199. and I host a show called
The Treatment on KCRW.
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200. Thanks to the Supreme Court
and the ruling of 1971,
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201. "fuck" is part of our protected speech,
we have the right to say it.
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202. We have what they would call
"the God-given right."
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203. Using the word "fuck"
becomes a way to be heard.
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204. Certainly— In the '60s,
Jane Fonda and Donald Sutherland,
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205. they had a touring troupe, FTA.
Fuck The Army.
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206. And Fuck The Draft.
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207. You were using that word to say,
"I was taking a stand."
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208. "Fuck" is also something a person says
when they are deeply hurt
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209. or disappointed by something.
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210. When NWA said "Fuck Tha Police,"
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211. it wasn't said
out of a sense of pure malice.
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212. It was said
with a deep sense of disappointment.
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213. That's what those words did.
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214. The power of NWA is that they were
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215. some of the earliest
successful gangsta rappers,
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216. and what gangsta rap really meant
in that time…
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217. was people sayin' things on songs
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218. that people were
not used to hearing in public.
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219. Going to a Public Enemy show
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220. or NWA in the '80s,
and just watching the way Eazy-E—
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221. It became lyrical,
the way he used the word "fuck."
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222. And to watch the way Cube would react,
and basically sort of—
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223. They'd do this call and response.
That to me was art.
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224. That was raising profanity
to the level of art.
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225. And making that part of art,
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226. becomes part of a conversation
we have every day, forever after.
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227. And, of course, the police
did not like to hear this sentiment.
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228. The group is NWA.
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229. The group's lyrics are
anti-police and anti-authority.
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230. I'm personally very offended.
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231. They didn't invent
the term "fuck the police."
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232. But they said it out loud.
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233. And it was analogous
that that same year, 1989,
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234. Public Enemy says "Fight The Power."
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235. So you got "Fight The Power" in New York,
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236. and you got "Fuck Tha Police" in LA.
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237. It's the same sentiment.
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238. It's just people
finally saying these things on record,
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239. because we have this new form
of expression called rap music
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240. where it's okay to say things
that you've been saying in secret.
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241. When you hear
people say "Fuck the police,"
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242. it's like, "I have no other options.
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243. And that's how I got here.
Because there's no other option."
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244. "Fuck" is a good protest word,
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245. because it is the swear word
that carries the most emotion.
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246. People need to be offended,
to be shaken out of their complacency,
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247. out of their misguided belief system.
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248. According to numerous studies,
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249. "fuck" is not only the most used
swear word in the English language,
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250. it's also the most censored.
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251. It's the granddaddy of cussing,
and we can find it all around us.
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252. It's one of the oldest,
most vulgar words we have,
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253. limitless in its ability
to shock and offend.
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254. So, why do we see it now on cross-stitch
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255. and scented candles?
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256. And if we see it everywhere,
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257. why is it still censored
on TV and in movies?
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258. Often there will be censorship.
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259. Uh, generally,
it's not government censorship,
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260. although it can be,
like in the case of the Soviet Union.
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261. Often, it's people self-censoring,
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262. like, just deciding that this is not…
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263. these words
have no place in public discourse.
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264. they're harmful to morality,
they're harmful to children,
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265. and so, we will not say these things.
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266. And of course, everybody does.
But then they're shocked.
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267. People just laugh when you say "fuck."
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268. It's just… everything's fuckin' funnier
when you say "fuck."
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269. I feel like swear words are
definitely more powerful in America.
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270. Not that powerful in Britain.
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271. You can say, "Morning, you fucking cunt"
to someone and they'll be fine.
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272. Say that to someone in America,
you'll get shot,
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273. because guns are legal here.
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274. When you're being offended,
you're basically saying to the world,
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275. "I have better morals than this person."
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276. "This person did this,
but I'm better than them."
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277. They're not going home and going,
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278. "I couldn't believe
the words I had to hear…"
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279. And if they are, they can fuck off.
Like, what's the point?
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280. They shouldn't be out
in the general public and all that stuff.
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281. I think the word "fuck"
has a baseline magic
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282. that can never be removed.
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283. If somebody looks at you
and says, "Fuck you,"
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284. you're gonna feel that.
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285. Just because it's more common,
doesn't mean it's lost any power.
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286. Those fucking killjoys at the
Motion Picture Association of America
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287. still consider the word bad enough
to slap an R rating
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288. on just about any movie
that uses it more than twice.
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289. Until the 1960s,
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290. you got— basically you were graded
by the Hays Code.
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291. And there were things
you just couldn't say.
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292. Then Jack Valenti came along
and the MPAA said,
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293. "Well, we're losing people.
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294. There are movies coming from Europe
where people talk about sex,
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295. and they apparently have sex
in these movies.
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296. We can't act like that
doesn't happen anymore."
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297. So, you had to acknowledge
that the real world existed.
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298. And the ratings offered ways
to gently introduce the concept
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299. of the real world to movies.
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300. With these rating, a G-rated movie
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301. will have a lot of sunlight,
and that's about it.
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302. That'll do, pig.
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303. That'll do.
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304. You get to PG
and there are levels of violence,
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305. maybe a couple of swear words.
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306. Son of a bitch.
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307. For PG-13, you can use the word "fuck"
and get away with it once.
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308. From the entire Channel 4 News team,
I'm Veronica Corningstone.
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309. And I'm Ron Burgundy.
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310. Go fuck yourself, San Diego.
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311. It can't be about fucking.
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312. And then you get to R,
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313. and you have movies
where characters talk like real people.
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314. Are you fucking kidding me?
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315. Profanity was
the life-preserver for movies.
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316. People went to the movies again.
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317. I think the first time I heard a curse
was in the movies.
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318. I think my parents took us
to see Coming to America.
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319. Once they got to, like, Queens,
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320. he was like, "We've arrived,"
or something.
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321. And somebody was like, "Fuck you!"
And he was like, "Yes, yes! Fuck you too!"
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322. I was in,
um… School of Rock,
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323. and I remember, in between scenes,
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324. the director was saying, uh…
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325. "It's PG-13, so we can say 'shit'
and we can say one 'fuck.'"
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326. I pitched that, um,
you don't use "fuck" at all,
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327. and then just the last, like,
after the credits,
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328. every— you know,
the whole cast just goes, "Fuck!"
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329. They didn't do that.
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330. Swearing in movies is big business.
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331. Just look at the filmography
of one randomly generated actor.
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332. You can see that
of the big six swear words,
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333. "fuck" and its derivatives
are by far the most frequent,
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334. making up 71% of the curses uttered
in the films of this random actor.
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335. So who do you think is
the sweariest actor of all time?
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336. Per movies, per swear words,
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337. per time on screen,
I think Eddie Murphy is your number one.
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338. No. Samuel L. It has to be Samuel I.
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339. He's swearin'-- He don't get the role
unless he can swear in it.
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340. When you're talking about the word "fuck,"
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341. it's hard not to really fall back
on the connoisseur of fuck,
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342. Samuel L. Jackson.
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343. What the fuck am I doin' in the back?
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344. You're the motherfucker
should be on brain detail.
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345. I remember I went to see Snakes on a Plane
only to see Samuel L. Jackson say,
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346. "I'm tired of these motherfuckin' snakes
on this motherfuckin' plane."
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347. It was— it was magical.
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348. The sweariest actor
isn't Samuel L. Jackson,
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349. Al Pacino,
or my personal favorite, Yosemite Sam,
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350. but… Jonah Hill.
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351. And while Jonah Hill is known
for his R-rated comedies,
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352. it was The Wolf of Wall Street
that made him the king of the curse words,
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353. swearing a confounding 107 times
in that movie alone.
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354. - Jonah Hill?
- Jonah Hill?
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355. There's no— Who's counting these?
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356. This is— That's not true!
That's not true!
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357. How did Jonah Hill say it so many times?
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358. It wasn't until 2004
that "fuck" first arrived
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359. uncensored on the small screen
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360. in an airing of
South Park: Bigger, Longer & Uncut
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361. on Comedy Central.
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362. But it was way back in 1970,
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363. when M*A*S*H dropped the first F-bomb
in a major motion picture.
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364. Movies can still move the needle
when it comes to characters…
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365. basically, in effect,
inventing catchphrases.
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366. We see this happen with, uh…
with newly-invented swear words.
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367. So MILF is the great example,
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368. because we know exactly the thing
that spread it throughout the world,
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369. which was this movie,
which was American Pie in 1999.
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370. M-I-L-F.
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371. - A Mom I'd Like to Fuck.
- Yeah, dude!
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372. If the best movies can do something
that make us want to be like them,
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373. and we hear something and,
"Wow, that's perfect. That…
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374. MILF? I'm usin' that.
I'm gonna find a way to use that."
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375. And you hear that in American Pie,
and then, ten years later,
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376. on 30 Rock, there's a fake reality show
called MILF Island.
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377. And it's everywhere. I mean, so…
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378. movies still can… act as these catalysts
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379. for keeping the language alive
in ways that are exciting.
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380. I love "fuck."
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381. It's like the Tom Hanks of curse words.
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382. It can do anything, can be in anything,
and we never get sick of it.
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383. We need to be able to say swear words.
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384. We need to be able to say "fuck."
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385. It's a gateway for creativity,
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386. it's a form of protest, and…
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387. it's good for us.
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388. I think there's a need now
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389. for swearing and profanity
more than any other time.
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390. We need the relief, the release.
That's really what profanity gives us.
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391. "Oh, shit!"
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392. Just a chance
to get that kind of stuff out.
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393. Bitch. Fuck. Shit. Damn. Pussy. Dick.
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394. I like that there are words you can't say
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395. and that you can only say
on special occasions.
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396. Like Christmas.
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397. Swearing is important if you need it
to get out your frustration
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398. or your despair.
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399. What the fuck?
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400. It's not important when
you're just swearing for swearing's sake.
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401. Don't swear for swearing's sake.
We're better than that.
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402. Swear because you mean it.
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403. I'm Nicolas Cage.
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404. Have a great fuckin' night.
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405. G-dshh!
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