JOHNNY CASH WAS TOLD TO CHANGE ONE WORD ON NATIONAL TELEVISION — AND HE SANG THE FORBIDDEN WORD ANYWAY. The word was not long. Just “stoned.” But in 1970, on national television, one word could frighten an entire network. Johnny Cash was preparing to perform Kris Kristofferson’s “Sunday Mornin’ Comin’ Down” on The Johnny Cash Show. The song was not clean Nashville polish. It was hunger, hangover, loneliness, and a man walking through Sunday with nothing left to hide. Network people wanted the line softened. They wanted “wishing, Lord, that I was home.” Cash knew what that did to the song. It turned confession into decoration. It made Kristofferson’s hard little truth safe enough for living rooms, but false enough to lose the wound. So when the moment came, Cash did not protect the network. He protected the song. He sang “stoned.” The performance helped push Kristofferson further into country music’s inner circle, and Cash’s version went on to become a No. 1 country hit and CMA Song of the Year. Sometimes rebellion is not a speech. Sometimes it is one word, sung exactly as written.
“Scroll down to the end of the article to listen to music.” ONE WORD ON NATIONAL TELEVISION WAS SUPPOSED TO…