This is a half-life that I can't live anymore in Singles from the album like "Just a Little While" and "All Nite (Don't Stop)" reached #1 on the Hot Dance Club Songs chart. [97], In January 2005, Fox, the network that carried Super Bowl XXXIX under the NFL's alternating network contract for the championship game, rejected an advertisement for the cold remedy Airborne that briefly featured the naked buttocks of veteran actor Mickey Rooney. "It's truly embarrassing for me to know that 90 million [140 million] people saw my breast, and then to see it blown up on the Internet the size of a computer screen ..." "But there are much worse things in the world, and for this to be such a focus, I don't understand". [184] Gawker ranked the performance among the most recent of the "10 Shows that Advanced Sex on Television", commenting the set "had all the elements of a huge story" and "within seconds the world searched furtively for pictures", concluding "it remains so ubiquitous, it's impossible to look at a starburst nipple shield without thinking "Janet Jackson"". ", Censorship and regulation of broadcasting, CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (, Federal Communications Commission v. Fox Television Stations (2009), Broadcast Decency Enforcement Act of 2005, "The NFL and CBS Look to MTV to Produce the AOL Super Bowl XXXVIII Halftime Show", "Timberlake, Janet Jackson Make Sexy Pair On Justified", "CBS Apologizes for Jackson Breast-Flash", CBS apologizes for halftime breast-baring, "Janet Jackson Apologizes for Bared Breast", Apologetic Jackson says 'costume reveal' went awry, "Super Bowl Halftime show generates controversy", "Janet Apologizes, Says Super Bowl Stunt Went Too Far", "Analysis | Everything you forgot about Janet Jackson and Justin Timberlake's 2004 Super Bowl controversy", "Janet In Semi-Revealing Topless Shot On New CD", "Moonves ready to play hardball in Viacom split", "MTV's "Making the Halftime Show" special may be cancelled", "Pop Tarts: Janet Jackson Says Man Behind 'Wardrobe Malfunction' a 'Creative Genius, "Nipple Ripples: 10 Years of Fallout From Janet Jackson's Halftime Show", "Spike Lee says Janet Jackson's breast baring a 'new low' for entertainers", Janet Jackson takes responsibility for breast-baring, "Jackson 'Nipplegate' illustrates the danger of chilling free speech", "PTC Outraged with CBS' Raunchy Super Bowl", "NFL strives to ensure superclean Super Bowl", "Poll: Janet Jackson Act Not Federal Case", "U.S. Children Still Traumatized One Year After Seeing Partially Exposed Breast On TV", "PRO FOOTBALL; Citing N.F.L., ESPN Cancels 'Playmakers, "Washington Redskins: Spin Control Can't Save Dan Snyder from Bringing Down NFL", "Budweiser 'Wardrobe Malfunction' Ad pulled from Superbowl [sic] but available via Wizbang", "Canadian self-regulation: The calm approach works", "Roger Franklin: Double standards rife in America's fickle society - World - NZ Herald News", "Woman drops lawsuit over Super Bowl halftime show", Woman drops lawsuit over Jackson peep show, "AOL demands $10m refund after Jackson mishap", "COMPLAINTS AGAINST VARIOUS TELEVISION LICENSEES CONCERNING THEIR FEBRUARY 1, 2004, BROADCAST OF THE SUPER BOWL XXXVIII HALFTIME SHOW", "Janet Jackson's Super Bowl Show Promises 'Shocking Moments, "CBS to FCC: Halftime Show Finale Was a Surprise to Us, Too", "CBS warns of censorship if bare breast edict stays", "FCC proposes statutory maximum fine of $550,000 against Viacom-owned CBS affiliates for apparent violation of indecency rules during broadcast of Super Bowl halftime show", "FCC Falls Short in Fining CBS Affiliates for Indecent Super Bowl Show", "Viacom to pay record $3.5 million to settle FCC indecency cases", "FCC Lowers $4 Million-Plus Indecency Boom", "Court tosses FCC 'wardrobe malfunction' fine", "Appeals court throws out fine against CBS in 'wardrobe malfunction' incident", "United States Court of Appeals for the Third CircuitĀ : No. More tests to run down here, and besides There are more important thing to focus on than a woman's body part, which is a beautiful thing. 66% of respondents to a March 2005 Time magazine poll believed that the FCC overreacted to the halftime show by fining CBS. [14] However, an Associated Press poll taken nearly three weeks after the Super Bowl found that although 54% of American adults considered the exposure distasteful, only 18% supported the FCC's investigation.