When
Tutti Frutti was first broadcast, the
Federal Republic of Germany was changing.
Tutti Frutti as the first erotic TV show on German television acted, so to speak, as a kind of "erotic
wall opening". The program was then criticized as being
misogynistic, but the fact that Tutti Frutti dared to deal with the bare facts hardly led to a scandal. Rather, the debate in the German tabloid and quality press at the time documented the "normalization of publicly staged nudity." The mostly devastating judgments of TV criticism aimed more at the questionable aesthetics of the program than at moral questions. Financially,
Tutti Frutti was a great success for a long time, as the advertising revenue far exceeded the minute price of the program.
Tutti Frutti drew attention to itself, among other things, by filing a complaint by the responsible state media authority against RTL for the display of sponsorship advertisements (hence the display of permanent commercials or the subsequent blurring of the logos), by recorders with strips in
3D (see
Pulfrich effect) in the second season and through a very extensive
merchandising (sound carriers, magazines, calendars, videos).
Neue Revue magazine
sponsored the first season. Above all, fans appreciated the show's rather anarchic charm. "
Tutti Frutti was what would later have been called a cult-classic," said media critic Hans Hoff. ==References==