Prodigy - Smack My Bitch Up -uncensored - Banne...
The reasons cited were not just sexual content or drug use. It was the combination : casual violence, explicit drug paraphernalia, and the perceived misogyny of the title. Feminist groups like Insight and Women’s Aid called for a boycott of The Prodigy entirely.
The video is a relentless, dizzying, and often repulsive depiction of a night of hedonistic excess. It was intended as a critique of rock-star machismo and drug-fueled violence. MTV initially refused to air it at all, calling it “glorification of violence and misogyny.” After intense negotiation, they allowed a version to air only after 11 PM, with heavy editing—blurring nudity, cutting shots of drug use, and even removing the final shot where the protagonist, looking into a mirror, is revealed to be a woman. Prodigy - Smack My Bitch Up -uncensored - banne...
Released in 1997, The Prodigy’s "Smack My Bitch Up" stands as one of the most culturally disruptive artifacts in electronic music history. Voted the most controversial song of all time in a poll by the Performing Right Society (PRS), the track became a flashpoint for debates on censorship, misogyny, and artistic intent. The Lyric and Intent The reasons cited were not just sexual content or drug use
To listen to it uncensored today is to understand a specific moment in time when electronic music was dangerous, music videos were events, and a single word could get your record pulled from every shelf in America. The Prodigy paid the price. And in doing so, they bought immortality. The video is a relentless, dizzying, and often