TN Lawmakers seek to cover up risqué mags like Maxim and Cosmopolitan

TN Lawmakers seek to cover up risqué mags like Maxim and Cosmopolitan

Should the titillating covers of magazines such as Maxim and Cosmopolitan be on full display in stores where children can see them?  A Tennessee Senate bill that will be voted on today proposes to make it a misdemeanor to display those magazines without a suitable cover – a cover like those over more pornographic magazines such as Playboy and Penthouse.  Here is the summary for SB 2249/HB2438 which clarifies who will be held responsible for displaying such materials.  This is from the Tennessee State Legislature page.

Bill Title: As introduced, clarifies that the person committing the offense of display of materials harmful to minors is the person responsible for displaying the visual depiction that contains material harmful to minors, which may include a retail store owner, retail store employee, distributor, supplier, or wholesaler of the material; increases offense from Class C to Class A misdemeanor. – Amends TCA Title 39, Chapter 17.The bill is not designed to put such magazines out of business; rather, it strives to keep the covers from being on full display.

I did an online search of images for Maxim front covers.  Some front covers were okay, but others crossed the line, in my opinion.  I did the same for Cosmopolitan.  Cosmo covers were definitely tamer than Maxim, but there were still some questionable ones.  I won’t post the covers here, but you can do your own search if you are unfamiliar with the magazines.

Both proponents and opponents to the bill are vocal. Some say that kids see more exposure at the neighborhood swimming pool or shopping mall than they’d see on the cover of these magazines.  Others say that with provocative nudity becoming more and more commonplace, the line needs to be drawn somewhere.  What do you think?

Note:  This post was edited to clarify the wording of the bill and to include a direct reference to the TN legislature page for the bill.

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5 Comments
  • GWB says:

    I don’t know if it was a weird cut&paste, or if the legislation has poor grammar, but the excerpted sentence doesn’t make any sense.

    As to this… I’d rather it happen at the state level than the national, but even more at the local level. I don’t have too much trouble with covering up some of these things – except that in many cases a woman dressed just like the cover could legally walk into the store and shop. So, obscuring the covers helps exactly how?

    • Melanie says:

      Thanks GWB. That was a direct quote from the news report referenced. I looked up the actual bill on the TN State Legislature page. I will also make a correction in the blog post. Here is the official terminology:

      Bill Title: As introduced, clarifies that the person committing the offense of display of materials harmful to minors is the person responsible for displaying the visual depiction that contains material harmful to minors, which may include a retail store owner, retail store employee, distributor, supplier, or wholesaler of the material; increases offense from Class C to Class A misdemeanor. – Amends TCA Title 39, Chapter 17.

      SENATE BILL 2449 By Summerville
      AN ACT to amend Tennessee Code Annotated, Title 39, Chapter 17, relative to printed material that is harmful to minors.
      BE IT ENACTED BY THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF TENNESSEE: SECTION 1. Tennessee Code Annotated, Section 39-17-914(c), is amended by
      deleting the subsection in its entirety and substituting instead the following:
      (c) A violation of this section is a Class A misdemeanor for each day the person
      is in violation of this section.
      SECTION 2. Tennessee Code Annotated, Section 39-17-914, is amended by adding the following new subsection:
      (d) The person who displays the visual depiction that contains material harmful to minors commits the violation of this section and such person includes a retail store owner, distributor, supplier, or wholesaler of the material or an employee thereof. SECTION 3. This act shall take effect July 1, 2014, the public welfare requiring it.

      • GWB says:

        This doesn’t even make it sound like they are making it illegal. It sounds like if it’s *already* illegal, they are just making the displayer (and everyone else in the supply chan) responsible (maybe the magazine rack was arrested before, I don’t know).

    • Merle says:

      HMMM, I hadn’t thought of this way. But I have to agree that more skin is visible at a pool or a beach. There is no shortage of bold young (usually) women who want to push the boundaries and/or shock people.

      Merle

  • VALman says:

    Here’s my difficulty with this: “There ought to be a law!” I don’t know how many times I heard this in my lifetime. In some cases, laws were needed. With others, it was do something or we’ll vote you out of office.

    Which leads us to where some of us are today, bitching, moaning, and groaning about the intrusive government in our lives! Well, we’ve been inviting them into them.

    My take is that let it be handled locally. If there are people concerned about this, ask to meet with merchants, express concerns, and look at options. However, given all the other displays available, I really wonder about this.

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