Syd Barrett did slur the offending word a bit, making it sound more like "fock", whereas in "Let's Roll Another One" he was more clearly singing "please just walk with me".
![black gay fucking dirty creammy black gay fucking dirty creammy](https://i.pinimg.com/736x/65/82/5b/65825b7a2fb776e6669e205ee1bfc4ff.jpg)
The recorded version changed these lyrics, but somehow also slipped in "Ooh don't talk with me / please just fuck with me".
![black gay fucking dirty creammy black gay fucking dirty creammy](https://i.pinimg.com/236x/56/62/5f/56625fdfdd0b52d655575d819ba4ddfe.jpg)
In these cases, younger audience members are expected to miss the messages, but adults will read them loud and clear. It is important to distinguish this trope from other tropes like Parental Bonus, Demographically Inappropriate Humour, Subtext, and Accidental Innuendo. Such events can result in bad (or good) press for a work, or angry calls to a network or studio. Sometimes the Media Watchdogs are just asleep at the wheel. The creators may hide offensive content as Easter Eggs. The content submitted for ratings may be so offensive that the demands to cut it down end up missing things that would have otherwise been obvious (AKA the Censor Decoy). Getting Crap Past the Radar refers to instances in which a writer, artist or other creator puts inappropriate content - stuff that directly violates the censorship standards they are working under - into their material with the deliberate intent to get past this censorship.