Because pitbull's fight but they are loveable creatures because,I have some 4 actually.
Because they make use of profanity.
Becuz she cusses in it
Frank Zappa's album Jazz From Hell, which, in spite of being an instrumental album, was marketed by Fred Meyer stores with a Parental Advisory sticker, on November 15, 1986.
pitbulls aulbum
Britney Spears' album BLACKOUT never had a parental advisory stamp on it. There is no actual heard hardcore swearwords. Artists have to use profane language in order to have parental advisory. Britney released Femme Fatale and it depicts F**K in one song on the album. This is however not considered a parental advisory because artists can slip past that mark if they only have 1 profane word in 1 song. Hopefully that answers the question you are asking.
Mind How You Go - The Advisory Circle album - was created on 2005-10-17.
In my opinion, the parental advisory stickers are a load of nonsense, whose only actual effect is to make the possession of that album more appealing to kids. By the way, there are plenty of Rock, Metal, and albums of other genres which have had the parental advisory stickers placed on them - the criteria for them was based on content, not on music genre. A Rap album with "clean" lyrics and content would not get such a sticker placed on it. By the way, there were plenty of Rap albums with no such stickers, as Rap was relatively "mild" prior to the 1990s. The whole "gangsta Rap" thing really started in 1986 with the song "Six N' the Morning" by Ice-T, but it didn't actually take off until 1989, when NWA released their debut album, Straight Outta Compton.
Fear of a Red Planet - album - was created on 2001-04-17.
Blue Planet - Donna Lewis album - was created on 1998-07-14.
Planet Jedward
hi. yes, it was, and then I had to change the name because of the similarity to 'Planet Patrol', an early 80's dance act. is it valuable? dunno. 'Pink World' goes for up to 200$
low and of little big planet