A:The show further lampooned the controversy surrounding its use of profanity, as well as the media attention surrounding the network show "Chicago Hopes singular use of the word "shit", with the season five premiere "It Hits the Fan", in which the word "shit" is said 162 times without being bleeped for censorship purposes, while also appearing uncensored in written form. In the days following the show's original airing, 5,000 disapproving e-mails were sent to Comedy Central. Despite its characters' 43 gratuitous uses of the racial slur "nigger" (which were technically allowed to air, but which the writers ostentatiously censored in all versions of the episode), the season 11 episode "With Apologies to Jesse Jackson" generated relatively little controversy, as most in the black community and the NAACP praised the episode for its context and its comedic way of conveying other races' perceptions of how black people feel when hearing the word. B:Knowing that the NAACP praised the show in this instance, given the circumstances of the episode's airing, would be plausible to assume that the organization might have preferred that the show aired with offensive racial slurs explicitly spoken, as this would represent the show's creative team's original intent? Answer: natural
A:The show further lampooned the controversy surrounding its use of profanity, as well as the media attention surrounding the network show "Chicago Hopes singular use of the word "shit", with the season five premiere "It Hits the Fan", in which the word "shit" is said 162 times without being bleeped for censorship purposes, while also appearing uncensored in written form. In the days following the show's original airing, 5,000 disapproving e-mails were sent to Comedy Central. Despite its characters' 43 gratuitous uses of the racial slur "nigger" (which were technically allowed to air, but which the writers ostentatiously censored in all versions of the episode), the season 11 episode "With Apologies to Jesse Jackson" generated relatively little controversy, as most in the black community and the NAACP praised the episode for its context and its comedic way of conveying other races' perceptions of how black people feel when hearing the word. B:Given the evolving tolerance for profanity on basic cable in the 2000s and beyond, does this passage make it sound like the networks still took a harder line on racial slurs than they did on other taboos, such as literal four-letter words? Answer: natural
A:The show further lampooned the controversy surrounding its use of profanity, as well as the media attention surrounding the network show "Chicago Hopes singular use of the word "shit", with the season five premiere "It Hits the Fan", in which the word "shit" is said 162 times without being bleeped for censorship purposes, while also appearing uncensored in written form. In the days following the show's original airing, 5,000 disapproving e-mails were sent to Comedy Central. Despite its 43 uncensored uses of the racial slur "nigger" (which the producers were required to censor on television and even on DVD releases), the season 11 episode "With Apologies to Jesse Jackson" generated relatively little controversy, as most in the black community and the NAACP praised the episode for its context and its comedic way of conveying other races' perceptions of how black people feel when hearing the word. B:From what we can learn about the writers' intentions for this episode, is it possible that they might have considered jokes such as a restaurant patron asking for vinegar, or a character chiding the notoriously-selfish Eric Cartman for being "niggardly," with the punchline in both cases being nothing but a deafening beep from viewers' tv speakers? Answer: natural
A:Before 1920, the university offered academic degrees to women and acknowledged them as full members of the university. (Some of these women, nicknamed the steamboat ladies, were awarded "ad eundem" degrees by Trinity College Dublin, between 1904 and 1907.) In 1920, many women graduated from the college at the Sheldonian Theatre and the principal at the time, Henrietta Jex-Blake, was given an honorary degree. B:Were the any female graduate who had obtained an academic degree from the University before 1920? Answer: repeated
A:Before 1920, the university gave academic degrees to women but refused to acknowledge them as full members of the university. (Some of these women, nicknamed the steamboat ladies, were awarded "ad eundem" degrees by Trinity College Dublin, between 1904 and 1907.) In 1920 the first women graduated from the college at the Sheldonian Theatre and the principal at the time, Henrietta Jex-Blake, was given an honorary degree. B:Was there a law forbidding young women from obtaining academic degrees after 1920? Answer: repeated
A:Before 1920, the university gave academic degrees to women but refused to acknowledge them as full members of the university. (Some of these women, nicknamed the steamboat ladies, were awarded "ad eundem" degrees by Trinity College Dublin, between 1904 and 1907.) In 1920 the first women graduated from the college at the Sheldonian Theatre and the principal at the time, Henrietta Jex-Blake, was given an honorary degree. B:Before 1920, were married women able to obtain academic degrees from the University? Answer: repeated
A:Before 1920, the university gave academic degrees to women but refused to acknowledge them as full members of the university. (Some of these women, nicknamed the steamboat ladies, were awarded "ad eundem" degrees by Trinity College Dublin, between 1904 and 1907.) In 1920 the first women graduated from the college at the Sheldonian Theatre and the principal at the time, Henrietta Jex-Blake, was given an honorary degree. B:Were the any female graduate who had obtained an academic degree from the University before 1920? Answer: repeated
A:The show further lampooned the controversy surrounding its use of profanity, as well as the media attention surrounding the network show "Chicago Hopes singular use of the word "shit", with the season five premiere "It Hits the Fan", in which the word "shit" is said 162 times without being bleeped for censorship purposes, while also appearing uncensored in written form. In the days following the show's original airing, 5,000 disapproving e-mails were sent to Comedy Central. The eleventh season episode "With Apologies to Jesse Jackson" was broadcast with 43 explicit utterances of the racial slur "nigger", but was relatively uncontroversial since the NAACP and the majority of the black community recognized, and lauded, the broader story and the way that the show was portraying the reactions of other races to black people's feeling upon experiencing such a slur. B:Knowing that the NAACP praised the show in this instance, given the circumstances of the episode's airing, would be plausible to assume that the organization might have preferred that the show aired with offensive racial slurs explicitly spoken, as this would represent the show's creative team's original intent? Answer: natural
A:The show further lampooned the controversy surrounding its use of profanity, as well as the media attention surrounding the network show "Chicago Hopes singular use of the word "shit", with the season five premiere "It Hits the Fan", in which the word "shit" is said 162 times without being bleeped for censorship purposes, while also appearing uncensored in written form. In the days following the show's original airing, 5,000 disapproving e-mails were sent to Comedy Central. The eleventh season episode "With Apologies to Jesse Jackson" was broadcast with 43 explicit utterances of the racial slur "nigger", but was relatively uncontroversial since the NAACP and the majority of the black community recognized, and lauded, the broader story and the way that the show was portraying the reactions of other races to black people's feeling upon experiencing such a slur. B:From what we can learn about the writers' intentions for this episode, is it possible that they might have considered jokes such as a restaurant patron asking for vinegar, or a character chiding the notoriously-selfish Eric Cartman for being "niggardly," with the punchline in both cases being nothing but a deafening beep from viewers' tv speakers? Answer:
natural