In 1936, Warner Brothers attempted to re-release the film, but were denied approval by the Production Code Office due to the film's "lewd" content.
This provoked the AutoAdmit administrators to suggest that Leiter had "proactively searched" for lewd content on the website.
Upon its original release, Class of 1984 was banned in several countries due to its lewd content.
The market was notorious amongst parental groups for containing more lewd content than the normal mainstream manga publishers would allow.
Messages are also automatically filtered to prevent users from posting messages with profanity or lewd content.
It is a very serious stab at funny, lewd content, a hybrid model that takes short-attention spans as a virtue.
Despite being a critical and commercial success, an attempt to re-release the film in 1936 was denied approval by the Production Code Office due to the film's "lewd" content.
In a 1978 decision, the Supreme Court found that government controls on broadcast media were constitutional because the pervasive nature of radio and television makes it impossible for parents to police lewd content.