The Words That Started It All
First performed in 1972, the routine was a brilliant deconstruction of censorship and societal hypocrisy. Carlin listed the seven profanities that were strictly forbidden on public airwaves and then spent several minutes hilariously dissecting why they
held such power over people. The words themselves were less important than the principle: who decides what language is acceptable, and why? The bit was an instant hit with counter-culture audiences, but it also painted a target on Carlin’s back. He was arrested in Milwaukee in 1972 for performing the routine and charged with disturbing the peace, a case that was later dismissed. This legal skirmish was just a preview of a much larger battle to come.
From a Radio Broadcast to the Supreme Court
The controversy exploded in 1973 when a New York radio station, WBAI, aired a recording of the routine in the middle of the afternoon. A man listening in the car with his son filed a complaint with the Federal Communications Commission (FCC). That complaint snowballed into a major legal case, FCC v. Pacifica Foundation, which went all the way to the Supreme Court. In 1978, the court ruled 5-4 that the government could, in fact, regulate “indecent” material on public broadcast airwaves, particularly during hours when children might be listening. The ruling didn’t make the words illegal, but it affirmed the FCC’s power to punish stations for airing them, effectively chilling free expression on radio and network TV.
The HBO Gamble
While the legal battle raged, Carlin landed his first special on a fledgling cable network called HBO in 1977. The special, On Location: George Carlin at USC, was a watershed moment. Unlike broadcast networks, HBO was a subscription service, not subject to FCC content regulations. This was Carlin’s chance to perform his material uncensored for a national television audience for the first time. The “almost didn’t make it” aspect wasn’t about a single executive trying to cut the bit, but about the massive cultural and legal wall that had been built around these words. Any other platform at the time would have been unthinkable. HBO itself acknowledged the controversial nature of the material, placing a unique on-screen warning before the final segment. The message advised viewers that it contained "especially controversial language" and they should "consider whether you wish to continue viewing."
A Legacy of Defiance
By taking his act to HBO, Carlin outsmarted the censors and established the cable network as a haven for unfiltered artistic expression. The broadcast of the “Seven Words” on his first special was not just a career-defining moment; it was a cultural one. It drew a clear line between the tightly controlled world of broadcast television and the new frontier of cable. Carlin’s insistence on performing the routine wasn't about a juvenile desire to curse on TV; it was a deeply held philosophical stance on the nature of language and the absurdity of censorship. By refusing to back down, he cemented his legacy as more than just a comedian—he became one of America's foremost defenders of free speech, proving that sometimes, the words you’re told you can’t say are the most important ones to hear.















