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Rox (TV series) : ウィキペディア英語版
Rox (TV series)

''Rox'' (originally titled ''J&B on the ROX'') is an independently produced TV series, first shown on the Bloomington, Indiana Public-access television cable TV in 1992. The show quickly garnered a cult following in Bloomington, home to Indiana University and its tens of thousands of students. Numerous news articles were written about the show and its producers, in particular when they found themselves pushing the bounds of free speech. In a few cases, Bloomington's Public-access TV administrators felt bound to disallow some of the show's more controversial material, citing the long-standing precedent that broadcast media should be subject to more rigorous standards of public decency than print media. This controversy served to cement the show's celebrity among its already-loyal fan base. Rox's producers signed a contract with Free Speech TV, allowing 19 episodes to be broadcast on FSTV's satellite channel starting in the summer of 2005.
The show recently returned for a fourth season after an eight-year hiatus, and is now distributed almost exclusively by the internet. Each of the fourth season episodes is available for download on the (Rox Website ), and material from older episodes is also made available as space allows. The first episode, appropriately titled ''Episode Number One'', appeared on television on July 7, 1992. The ninety-first and ninety-second episodes, ''Property is Theft'' (Parts I and II), have recently been released on DVD.
==Overview==

Rox stars (and is produced by) Bart Everson (frequently referred to by his first initial, "B") and Joe Nickell (likewise referred to as "J"). J's role during each show is that of bartender; he mixes drinks which both J and B then drink. B's role is that of the editor. His responsibilities include editing, combining, and creating the finished show. Both J and B serve as narrators and occasionally interviewers during the show itself.
Rox's producers describe the TV series as "A serial art-life/life-art documentary project. With mixed drinks." A theme in the earliest episodes was a fairly repetitive (and humorous) request for viewers to mail alcohol (for sampling and use on the show, of course) to 711 East Cottage Grove in Bloomington, Indiana. This was both the place of production for the earlier episodes (in the basement, no less) and the home of Joe Nickell ("J"). Later shows have shifted focus somewhat to more socio/political issues, probably due to the changing age and focus of the show's two producers.

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