Working on X-rated material
scantey
94 Posts
I work for a gaming company and we just received a game in that is rated M for(mature). Since I have only worked on children games I am not sure if I need to have the employees sign a release that they are not offended by the material. I was thinking I would wait and see if anyone comes to me stating that they felt offended but I do not want them to come back later saying they felt violated. The game has frontal nudity in it. Any suggestions?
Comments
My answer is full of assumptions about what you do there so if it seems like I don't know what I'm talking about, that's probably correct.
Or the college girl who takes a summer job at the umbrella station on the beach in Destin, Florida. Is the stand operator liable if she complains about the guys in swimming trunks and Speedos who come into her grass hut in various stages of, shall we say, display? If every worksite is liable for the various forms of 'harassment' that take place in that facility and have an obligation to correct them, this goes much deeper than simply being sure people behave themselves acceptably at the workplace.
Keeping sexy calendars out of toolboxes in the shop is one thing. Hustler magazines for sale and things popping out of Speedos is quite another. What to do?
This thread causes me to remember my days as a bookseller in a large national chain. I didn't care that they sold playboy / playgirl. I also didn't care that they sold magazines and books about how cool and neato drug use is. I didn't care that the "sexuality section" shelves were so "well browsed" that the books were almost falling apart and the manager added more chairs and benches to that area so people would be more comfortable while they read Nancy Friday. I didn't care that they sold the Satanic Bible or Mien Kumpf (sp?). I did, however, care that the store sold Jacque Stergis (sp?) books full of pictures of naked children touted as "art". The really sick thing is they sold like hot cakes. I hated ringing those up. The store didn't have any policies that addressed employees working with these types of materials. The only policy they had was if a customer called up (or showed up) and asked if we sold "pornography" we were supposed to get the manager. He would then say, "no, we do not sell pornography". If the customer pointed out the playboy's, etc. then the manager would say "we don't consider that pornography". It was kinda weird.
We had a lot of painters, sculpters and other artists display their work for sale in the store. I remember one time a sculpter brought in a statue he created of a woman with a breast exposed. It was (in my opinion) tasteful and quite beautiful (in "Greek style" if you will). The manager hit the roof and said it could not be displayed in our "family oriented store".
If employees came into this environment working on adult games, that would be one thing, but if they came into a childrens' game environment and this was "sprung" on them, it might be offensive as well as a shock!
I'm leaning more towards Rockie and Whatever's solution and having a memo and giving the chance to express any concerns at that time.
It sounds like this is something new to your employees and so being proactive may be better than being reactive. Just my thoughts, good luck.
Just my thoughts an opinion. I definately don't envy you on this one!!
LFernandes
What if the first part of the game was mildly graphic and the EE felt that they could tolerate it but further on, it becomes very explicit? Should the employee be forced to continue testing it even if it makes them extremely uncomfortable?
If they turn off the game because it bothers them, would it become insubordination if they refuse to continue to test it?
I wonder how the adult magazine employer's handle it.
If time goes on and more X-rated material shows up then we are back to "this is what the business is" and if you are to work here you must be comfortable with it.