clipped from: www.puppetgov.com   
http://www.puppetgov.com/images/potd/Bill-Hicks-comedy01.jpg
clipped from: blog.puppetgov.com   

In 1993, “on October 1st, the comedian Bill Hicks, after doing his twelfth gig on the David Letterman show, became the first comedy act to be censored at CBS’s Ed Sullivan Theatre, where Letterman is now in residence, and where Elvis Presley was famously censored in 1956. Presley was not allowed to be shown from the waist down. Hicks was not allowed to be shown at all.” Bill Hicks was known as a comedian, but to me, and many others like me, he was a prophet. “He challenged mainstream beliefs, aiming to ‘enlighten people to think for themselves.’

His jokes included general discussions about society, religion, politics, philosophy and personal issues. Bill’s material was often deliberately controversial. In both his stand-up performances, and during interviews, he often criticized Media and popular culture as oppressive tools of the ruling class, meant to “keep people stupid and apathetic.’”