'Deadpool & Wolverine' leads a pop culture cascade of F-bombs
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[August 05, 2024]
By Lisa Richwine and Jorge Garcia
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - What the f---? The F-word, once seen as the most
shocking expletive in the English language, has become commonplace in
pop culture.
"Deadpool & Wolverine," the R-rated Marvel film from family friendly
Walt Disney, features the word "fuck" more than 100 times. Taylor Swift
sings it 18 times in just one song on her hit album "The Tortured Poets
Department," and many other pop stars utter it freely.
As its public usage has increased, the word has undergone what language
experts call a "semantic shift," or a change in meaning over time, said
Roy Peter Clark, a writing teacher and author of several books on
writing.
He points to a scene in "My Lady Jane," a drama series on Amazon's Prime
Video streaming service. A girl who appears to be roughly 10 years old
uses the word as her older sister is about to be beheaded under orders
from Queen Mary.
"Fuck Mary," the girl says.
Putting the F-word in the mouth of a child actor, Clark said, shows it
has become less taboo over time.
"It's used in so many different ways, some that are clearly very
negative, and other ways that are humorous, and other ways that are
mischievous and other ways that are emphatic," said Clark, a senior
scholar at the Poynter Institute, a nonprofit focused on media. "It has
become less negative."
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A British study published in 2021 found that "fuck" was the most-used
swear word and was particularly popular with teenagers and young adults.
A 2023 study published in the Journal of Pragmatics sought to understand
how its usage had evolved.
Comparing conversations among British teenagers in the 1990s and 2010s,
researchers Robbie Love and Anna-Brita Stenstrom found less slinging of
the F-word as an insult, or as a term for sexual intercourse.
The word was more likely to appear in phrases such as "what the fuck?"
and "for fuck's sake," they found. Teens tossed the word around in
friendly conversations.
Karen North, a psychologist and professor of digital social media at the
University of Southern California's Annenberg School, said habituation
likely has made the word less jarring.
"Anything that you experience over and over and over again, you're
desensitized to," North said. "If you're in a room that smells very bad,
then after a few minutes you don't smell it."
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Displays are seen outside the premiere of 'Deadpool and Wolverine'
in New York City, New York, U.S., July 22, 2024. REUTERS/Caitlin
Ochs/File Photo
 With language, "if you keep hearing
the F-word, or any particular inflammatory or emotional thing over
and over and over again, you'll start desensitizing because your
senses get used to it," North said.
Many people still find the F-word highly offensive.
Its use is often cited by politicians to ban books such as J.D.
Salinger's 1951 novel "The Catcher in the Rye" in schools and
libraries, Clark noted.
At Disney, executives offered "nothing but support" after seeing the
foul language in the new "Deadpool" movie, said Kevin Feige,
president of Marvel Studios. They understood that the raunchy humor
was a key to the success of two earlier "Deadpool" movies made by
Fox.
When Disney bought the Deadpool character as part of a deal with
Fox, Marvel filmmakers decided "we were going to stay true to the
spirit of what Deadpool is," Feige said.
"Deadpool & Wolverine" was rated R in the U.S. and 15 in the UK, a
signal to parents that it was not intended for young children.
Audiences embraced the movie, which racked up the biggest opening
weekend of the year with $211 million at U.S. and Canadian box
offices. Total global sales reached an estimated $824 million
through Sunday.
For the Deadpool character, the F-word "makes sense, and if it
wasn't there, it wouldn't feel right," said 22-year-old Marvel fan
Gaige Johnson from Michigan.
Another Marvel fan, Diana Alvort from Mexico, laughed when asked if
there was too much swearing in the film.
"Fuck that," she said. "Come on, it's a fun movie. Let's not get so
serious. You know, there's moments for everything and so I don't
have a problem with that. Just enjoy it."
(Reporting by Lisa Richwine and Jorge Garcia in Los Angeles;
Additional reporting by Rollo Ross; Editing by Mary Milliken and
Rosalba O'Brien)
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