While I'm not fond of entertainment that "pushes the envelope" just for the sake of "getting away with" being racy or cursing, I also think it can be and occasionally is done well and for the purpose of telling a good story. George Carlin (especially) and the South Park team have done great jobs of USING obscenity to get a point across. I'm also sure there's a compelling story to be told that involves or even centers around group sex or brutal, graphic murders, though I can't say I've ever seen such a thing.
I also strongly believe that anybody who might take their social cues or life lessons from Quentin Tarantino, Adam Sandler, South Park, or Batman is pretty dang misguided to begin with, and we really can't blame their deviant behaviors on their choice of entertainment.
My biggest objections to such things are that (a) it's a waste of my time, because I already have a pretty good idea what naked women and/or intestines look like, and (b) especially in discussion, if you don't have enough to say that you're padding it out with profanity and dubious stories about sex or race, you sound like a complete idiot who doesn't have anything to contribute.
That all out of my system, I agree with Darkmark. While the other companies were often as bad or worse, Gaines certainly knew what was brewing, pushed his line even further, then tried to argue that it wasn't SO bad because, hey, they could've done far nastier things. If that isn't "asking for it," I don't know what is.
I mean, imagine accelerating as you enter a speed zone. Then, when you get pulled over, arguing with the cop about the ticket because, after all, you could have floored it and aimed for the woman pushing the stroller.