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THERE'S LOTS MORE DVD FILTERING TO BE DONE.


Byline: Stephanie Becker

IMAGINE washing your DVD DVD: see digital versatile disc.
DVD
 in full digital video disc or digital versatile disc

Type of optical disc. The DVD represents the second generation of compact-disc (CD) technology.
 player's mouth out with soap. That's what you get in RCA's latest technological breakthrough. It's a DVD player A stand-alone device that plays DVDs. It contains a DVD drive and the electronics to decode the digital video. The device may play only manufactured DVDs, or it may be able to play DVD-R, DVD-RW and DVD+RW discs. DVD players are cabled to a TV or home theater system for display.  programmed to edit out offensive material. The player is loaded with software manufactured by the company ClearPlay.

They're not to be confused with Clear Channel, which is the radio behemoth behemoth (bē`hĭmŏth, bĭhē`–) [Heb.,=plural of beast], large, fanciful primeval monster, like Leviathan, evoking the hippopotamus mentioned in the Book of Job.  and Howard Stern archenemy arch·en·e·my  
n.
1. A principal enemy.

2. often Archenemy The Devil; Satan. Used with the.


archenemy
Noun

pl -mies a chief enemy
. ClearPlay is based in Salt Lake City where - perhaps not so coincidentally - all addresses are based on the distance from the Mormon Church The Mormon Church is a religious body founded in 1830 in Fayette, New York, by Joseph Smith. It is also known as the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, or LDS Church. There are 7.7 million Mormons worldwide. . I'm not saying things are pretty squeaky clean there, but vanilla is the No. 1 ice cream flavor and the risque ris·qué  
adj.
Suggestive of or bordering on indelicacy or impropriety.



[French, from past participle of risquer, to risk, from risque, risk; see risk.]

Adj.
 fringe go for the multicolored sprinkles.

ClearPlay's staff of screeners decide what the *&%! needs to be exorcised to make movies a wholesome experience. Viewers then have the option to chose any or all of 14 different categories of offense, everything from potty mouth language to vile vituperatives; from graphic violence to mild Stooges eye-pokes; from illicit drug illicit drug Street drug, see there  use to all-out nudity.

Forget about director's cut, now there's Mommy's cut.

So you can watch total annihilation in ``Terminator 3'' but skip the Governator's naked butt, or catch ``The Patriot'' without those pesky scenes of our forefathers forefathers nplantepasados mpl

forefathers nplancêtres mpl

forefathers nplVorfahren
 wiping out our current ``coalition of the willing'' partner the British. Or sit back and relax with the Oscar-winning ``Gladiator'' sans the violence. (That would make it, what, a two-minute movie?)

Obviously directors are screaming holy $*&

that their creative vision is being violated. Oh, please. Have they ever watched what happens when their precious cinematic opus is hacked into bite-size bits for a run at 3 p.m. on a Sunday cable station? After 15 minutes of commercials for the Thigh-erciser, Abdomin-alator and Rotisserie-bot, who can remember that Suzanne Somers is actually not in the movie? And wanna wan·na  
Informal
1. Contraction of want to: You wanna go now?

2. Contraction of want a: You wanna slice of pie? 
 bet that Steven Spielberg has never, not once, not a single time in his entire life, hit the fast-forward button on his remote control during the boring parts? (Note to Mr. Spielberg: I loved every second of ``1941.'')

While I will take the politically expedient position and sit squarely on the fence about ClearPlay's filtration system, I want to do what great entrepreneurs of this new millennium do so well: rip off, I mean, expand on the idea.

May I suggest the ``Annoying Actor Deletion'' software? Check off all those performers you can't stand and instantly ``Thelma and Louise'' is just Thelma (of course leaving Brad Pitt).

Or how about the Ben Stiller option - kill off Ben's career in your own home before his next five movies do.

Or the deluxe model with a Baldwin Family Filter. Truthfully, wouldn't ``The Marrying Man'' be great without - which one was it - Zeppo?

And how about a ``Lovelorn Filter'' for the recently scorned? Watch as a little editing turns a romantic comedy into a sob story as tragic as your life by chopping out the happy reunions. How satisfying would it be if ``Pretty Woman'' ended ugly, with Richard Gere leaving Julia Roberts to her miserable life. And imagine if something didn't give and Diane Keaton went off with Keanu Reeves and not Jack Nicholson - wait, that's the happier ending - rewrite!
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Title Annotation:Editorial
Publication:Daily News (Los Angeles, CA)
Article Type:Editorial
Date:May 13, 2004
Words:524
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