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What are the levels of movie ratings?

By Caleb Butler

What are the levels of movie ratings?

Movie (Film) Ratings

  • G: General Audiences. This program is designed to be appropriate for all ages.
  • PG: Parental Guidance Suggested. Parents are urged to give parental guidance.
  • PG-13: Parents Strongly Cautioned. Some material may not be suited for children under age 13.
  • R: Restricted.
  • NC-17: Clearly Adult.

Is TV MA worse than R?

Programming rated TV-MA in the United States by the TV Parental Guidelines signifies content for mature audiences. It is equivalent to the MPAA film ratings R and NC-17. Programs with this rating are usually not suitable for minors under 17 years of age (18 in some cases).

How are movie ratings determined?

Ratings are assigned by a board of parents who consider factors such as violence, sex, language and drug use, then assign a rating they believe the majority of American parents would give a movie.

How are movies and TV shows rated?

Movies are rated by an industry group called the Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA). TV shows are rated by each network’s own censors, video games are rated by the Entertainment Software Rating Board (ESRB), and music is regulated by the individual labels that distribute the albums.

What is the most inappropriate rating for a movie?

PG-13
Rated PG: Parental guidance suggested – Some material may not be suitable for children. Rated PG-13: Parents strongly cautioned – Some material may be inappropriate for children under 13. Rated R: Restricted – Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian. Rated X: No one under 17 admitted.

Is mature audience worse than R?

TV-MA is a more severe rating than R. TV-MA is the equivalent of NC-17 in the US. Note that R and MA are used by two different groups. The MPAA (Motion Picture Association of America) uses a rating system that you can review here where R is the second most severe, coming up behind NC-17.

Who gives movies their rating?

Classification and Ratings Administration
Established in 1968, the film rating system provides parents with the information needed to determine if a film is appropriate for their children. Ratings are determined by the Classification and Ratings Administration (CARA), via a board comprised of an independent group of parents.

Can a PG-13 movies say the F word?

The restrictions set by the US ratings board mean the F-word can only be used once in a PG-13 movie.

What does the D stand for in TV ratings?

The Content Labels TV Parental Guidelines may have one or more letters added to the basic rating to let parents know when a show may contain violence, sex, adult language, or suggestive dialogue. D – suggestive dialogue (usually means talks about sex) L – coarse or crude language. S – sexual situations.