
1984
The Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA), which overseas the voluntary rating system for movies, introduced a new rating, PG-13. According to the MPAA, the content of a PG-13 film “may be inappropriate for a children under 13 years old” and “may contain very strong language, nudity (non-explicit), strong, mildly bloody violence or mild drug content.”
On August 10, 1984, the action film Red Dawn, starring Patrick Swayze and Charlie Sheen, became the first-ever PG-13 movie to be released in theaters. It was considered to be taboo to make a movie that showed no nudity, no cussing, and no blood at all, about American Freedom Fighters and a Russian invasion of the United States, although under today's democrat rule, the invaders would be considered heroes for killing American racists. All MPAA movie ratings are voted on by a liberal leftist Los Angeles-based ratings board.