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No Smoking

Family-Friendly Firearms

Adaptational Modesty

Never Say "Die"

Black Blood and Made of Bologna

No Swastikas

Family-Friendly Stripper

Frothy Mugs of Water

Positive Discrimination

She's a Man in Japan, Get Back in the Closet, and Hide Your Lesbians

We All Live in America

Spared by the Adaptation

Too Soon

Gosh Dang It to Heck!

Digital Bikini

Abridged for Children

Using digital editing to add clothes to naked people or to make someone's clothes less revealing.

This involves the removal the "ethnic gesture". It might be as subtle as obscuring onscreen foreign characters or changing the names of people and places. Taken to extremes, the dubbed script is filled with local pop culture references that were not in the original and scenes of uniquely foreign conventions are edited out.

Characters can't enjoy a cigarette (be it tobacco — or, in more extreme cases, cannabis, crack cocaine or meth), lest more impressionable viewers imitate what they see.

Editing, delaying, or banning something due to the plot being similar to a real-life current event that may be considered to be done in poor taste

Removing offensive imagery.

Covering up extreme gore and blood through digital editing or redrawing the carnage so it's less shocking.

Replacing sensitive words with their "safer" variants

Replacing alcohol with non-alcoholic drinks (usually juice, soda, or water) and hand-waving the drunken behavior as "acting crazy" or "being a jerk".

Changing a homosexual or transgender character into a heterosexual or cisgender character (and turning their gay or lesbian relationships into heterosexual ones) for less tolerant audiences.

If works are edited to remove material "unsuitable" for minors.

Replacing realistic weapons with more fantastic or less lethal, often silly, ones.

Strip clubs and other sex establishments have the workers in relatively "innocent" skimpy clothes rather than being naked, topless, or in some kind of overt fetish costume.

An adaptation makes a character's usual dress sense much less revealing than in the original, or tones down or cuts incidents involving characters being naked or partially-clad.

Making the body count of an originally violent work significantly lower, or zero.

The villain can't be a member of a race, ethnic group, religion, or social class that has historically been persecuted. Even when the group the hated character represents hasn't been persecuted, may still come into play if the group the character represents wields a lot of power in society and threatens a boycott of the work.

Characters can't mention anything about death and the afterlife because it may be too upsetting; even ghosts might be seen as too creepy for kids. In many cases, the word "kill" can never be used, even if it's in a comedic context.