Officials at a U.S. family group have lashed out at radio networks for playing Britney Spears' new tune despite it's "indecent content".
Parents Television Council bosses are upset that the pop stars' naughty If U Seek Amy song is getting airplay in America, despite warnings the tune is obscene.
They claim it's clear that Spears sings "F-*-*-K me" repeatedly in the song's chorus - because that's what the title breaks down as.
The song has already upset family groups in Australia, who called for a widespread radio ban on the tune, and now the PTC bosses have followed suit.
The PTC officials want radio stations to stop playing the song between the hours of 6am and 10pm, because it "violates the broadcast indecency law".
PTC president Tim Winter says, "There is no misinterpreting the lyrics to this song, and it's certainly not about a girl named Amy.
"It's one thing for a song with these lyrics to be included on a CD so that fans who wish to hear it can do so, but it's an entirely different matter when this song is played over the publicly owned airwaves, especially at a time when children are likely to be in the listening audience."
Meanwhile, Spears' record label, Jive, has issued an edited version of the track to radio networks. The new tune excises the "k" from "Seek".
With clips from more than 200 teen movies made in the decade after 1995's Clueless,...
Britney Spears, the young queen of pop, has hit a fork in her career....
The cameo-driven, "Mission: Impossible 2"-spoofing, movie-within-a-movie, pre-title sequence of "Austin Powers in Goldmember" is the...
Freshly graduated from jail bait status, Britney Spears wastes no time getting down to her...