Hello everyone! The person in the picture is me, Alexandru, I'm 22 years old, I've been living in Italy since I was a child, and I'm the founder of this project born in 2018. The Euro Truck Simulator 2 community in Romania, as well as the international one, needed a detailed map where kilometers are almost real to simulate the real life of a truck driver! I started from scratch and began this project with the desire to create something important for all those who are passionate about this game and who were looking for something unique in this sector of map mods. In the meantime, other guys passionate about roads, infrastructure, and especially this aspect of translating reality into the game, have joined, and today, together, we manage to extend the map, kilometer by kilometer, road by road, town by town, and offer, for a fairly affordable price, a premium experience to everyone in this game. Our happiness as developers is when our fans tell us that they can't believe we've reached them through their town/village and that they recognize almost 1:1 the area where they live day by day. Coming back to us, currently, our team, besides me, consists of another 4 members (Alex1289, Alex563, AndreiAlx and Andu), and together we hope to bring this project to a successful end!
+3.500 customers have chosen our map!
During the height of its syndication, the show pulled massive ratings because it offered a level of unfiltered reality that viewers could not find anywhere else on standard cable or broadcast networks. For many viewers, it was a guilty pleasure—a trainwreck of human drama that was impossible to look away from.
José Luis tenía 3 reglas para esta entrevista:
The pressure had a significant impact. Major advertisers, including AT&T and Time Warner Cable, agreed to pull their commercials. The turning point came in August 2012. After an by GLAAD and the NHMC, Liberman Broadcasting, the network's parent company, permanently removed "Jose Luis Sin Censura" from its broadcast schedule.
During a 2012 broadcast, Jose Luis invited a guest who claimed to have evidence of a political assassination cover-up. Mid-sentence, the guest pulled out a classified document. Before the control room could cut the feed, Jose Luis grabbed the paper, held it directly to the camera, and read the names of the officials involved. The station was raided by federal agents two hours later. The episode was never re-aired, but the clip survived online, cementing his reputation. Jose luis sin censura too hot for tv
What set the program apart was its lack of censorship. While mainstream networks heavily blurred nudity and silenced profanity, José Luis Sin Censura frequently allowed aggressive verbal abuse, physical altercations, and highly explicit sexual discussions. The studio audience was encouraged to participate actively, often chanting provocations, taking sides, and fueling the hostility between the onstage guests. The "Too Hot for TV" Content
Blatant homophobic slurs used by guests and cheered on by the audience.
The episodes featured a live studio audience that was actively encouraged to participate, take sides, and chant at the guests. Topics ranged from infidelity and paternity disputes to bitter neighbor feuds. However, it was the raw delivery—characterized by physical altercations, bleeped-out profanity, and extreme verbal abuse—that earned it the "too hot for TV" reputation. Why It Was "Too Hot for TV" During the height of its syndication, the show
The phrase captures the exact reason the show became a cultural phenomenon—and why it ultimately vanished from the airwaves. It represents a era of reality television where shock value reigned supreme, leading to a historic clash between media corporations, civil rights advocacy groups, and federal regulators.
: It was heavily criticized for promoting anti-LGBTQ+ slurs, misogyny, and anti-immigrant rhetoric. The "Too Hot for TV" Reputation
Do you remember when late-night TV was actually unpredictable? Let’s talk about the legend himself: . 📺🔥 Major advertisers, including AT&T and Time Warner Cable,
: Frequent violent fights between guests, which were sometimes incited by the host or audience.
What did after the show was taken off the air Share public link
, documenting over 20 episodes that contained what they termed "virulent" homophobic, misogynistic, and anti-Latino content.