
Drinking and Drugs are really basic also.

Yes, they talk about it but other then like not even a full second of them walking in on 3 people in a bedroom there isn't really anything. Other than a split second of partial nudity there aren't any sex scenes. In a comedic way they show it lying on the ground but it's super fake and it's all a joke. Or when the gym teacher is shot on the penis and it falls off. Like when Johnny Depp is shot and tells his friend about all his regrets as he dies. When there is really any form of violence it used in a comedic way. I know my kids know about sexual information from friends and I hate to say it but most kids who are way to young to know so much know all of the information about sex. The swearing, many f-bombs sometimes used in sexual concepts but most kids know what that means already whether you like it or not kids learn about this stuff from friends or school. Jonah Hill and Channing Tatum had an amazing performance playing idiot cops trying to fit in as teenagers at a high school.

Though played for laughs, The Dish was inspired by actual events.Now, this movie is one of my favorites. When a change in Apollo 11's schedule means the Australian dish will have to pick up the vital broadcast from the moon, Cliff, Mitch, and Al must put aside their differences to pull the show together. Mayor McIntyre (Roy Billing) and his wife May (Genevieve Mooy) are thrilled to be greeting a small but steady stream of important visitors, though many of the locals are not especially good with etiquette, and several members of Buxton's team, most notably high-strung Mitch (Kevin Harrington), are less than enthusiastic about Al Burnett (Patrick Warburton), the know-it-all NASA technician brought in to oversee the Australian operations.

Buxton and his men are more than happy to help, and the village is agog as they gear up for their own small part in one of the world's greatest adventures. As NASA prepares for Apollo 11, the first manned voyage to the moon, Buxton and his crew are asked if they will allow their telescope's dish to be used as a backup receiver for the television transmission from the moon, should the main receiver in California fail. In the summer of 1969, Cliff Buxton (Sam Neill) leads a team of scientists overseeing the operations of one of the world's largest radio telescope dishes, nestled in a New South Wales community of sheep farmers. In this comedy, as American astronauts prepare to make one giant leap for mankind, a small Australian town stumbles through its own small steps to help.
