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Some of the pictures featured illustrations of characters with these unusual body parts. The prosecutor and an expert on child pornography argued that these body parts had no effect and that the comic characters indeed were persons. As examples of what is not a person, the child pornography expert mentioned The Simpsons and Donald Duck. [123]
• Cartoon Network (2011) • Netflix (2013) • Mirari Films • Cartoon Network Studios: TV-PG: Flash The Looney Tunes Show: Animated sitcom: 2 seasons, 52 episodes: Sam Register: May 3, 2011 – August 31, 2014: Cartoon Network: Warner Bros. Animation: TV-PG: Traditional ThunderCats (2011) • Action • Adventure • Science fiction: 1 ...
An example of commercial use on a pair of vending machines for bottled water at a WWII Battleship Museum. In 1982, the "We Can Do It!" poster was reproduced in a magazine article, "Poster Art for Patriotism's Sake", a Washington Post Magazine article about posters in the collection of the National Archives. [21]
This is a category list of teen animated television series that are originally targeted towards teens. Pages in this category should be moved to subcategories where applicable. This category may require frequent maintenance to avoid becoming too large.
The "Just Do It" campaign went out to a range of media outlets including merchandise, outdoor billboards, print media, and graffiti art. Throughout the campaign, Nike enlisted a range of people from varying ethnicities and races, as well as numerous notable athletes, in order to attract customers and promote the image of Nike as being reliable ...
Shōjo manga originated from Japanese girls' culture at the turn of the twentieth century, primarily shōjo shōsetsu (girls' prose novels) and jojōga (lyrical paintings). The earliest shōjo manga was published in general magazines aimed at teenagers in the early 1900s and began a period of creative development in the 1950s as it began to ...
Lolicon is a Japanese abbreviation of "Lolita complex" (ロリータ・コンプレックス, rorīta konpurekkusu), [5] an English-language phrase derived from Vladimir Nabokov's novel Lolita (1955) and introduced to Japan in Russell Trainer's The Lolita Complex (1966, translated 1969), [6] a work of pop psychology in which it is used to denote attraction to pubescent and pre-pubescent girls. [7]
Types of this form of pornography include: Modified photographs of real children; Fully computer-generated imagery [1]; Adults made to look like children [2]; Drawings or animations that depict sexual acts involving minors but are not intended to look like photographs may be considered in some jurisdictions to be simulated.