As I noted last week, the obedient hackery of the
legendarily foul mouthed Paul Dacre failed in their attempt to use the Daily Mail’s attack on Channel 4’s Big Fat Quiz Of 2012 to generate a
second Sachsgate. No-one would have traded places with the unfortunate Mail staffers who had to break the bad
news to the Vagina Monologue in his modern day Fuehrerbunker.
Did you compare me to f***ing Hitler, c***?!?
But television must keep on being portrayed as the Great
Evil: the Mail cannot or will not raise
its own level of credibility or accuracy, so broadcast media has to be dragged
down into the same gutter as that inhabited by the cheaper end of the Fourth
Estate. And at the front of the cab rank for hatchet job duty this time is the
author of the Stephen Gately hatchet job, Jan Moir.
“Who
decided to make the BBC's Sunday night period drama an anti-women orgy of gore?”
demands this least savoury of Dacre’s Glendas, as she turns the attack away
from Channel 4 and back to the hated Beeb. The Corporation has launched a new
drama series for Sunday nights called Ripper
Street, set in London in the days following the disappearance of Jack The
Ripper.
What Ms Moir really looks like
Back then, the Police force was in its infancy, and with the
ingrained poverty and disease of London’s East End, made worse by the numbers
of people living together in what was a very small area for its population,
meant that life was cheap, crime was frequent, and all too often violent (yes,
the penalty when criminals got caught was severe, but then, all too often they
didn’t get caught).
This is discussed by
Richard Warlow, the lead writer for Ripper Street, who talks of “Policing the meanest streets imaginable”
and also of “Committed lawmen doing the
best they can in the most impossible circumstances”. The series will
feature “not just murderers ... but ...
pornographers, child gangs, slum landlords, vigilantes and anarchists”. And
it is broadcast after the 2100 hours watershed.
Thus most viewers concerned about the potential content can
add two and two and figure out the result. But not Jan Moir, who, after briefly
slobbering over the male leads, wails “How
did Ripper Street ... get past the censors ... or indeed anyone at the BBC with
a modicum of sense or sensibility?”, this after condemning the series as “woman-hating”. That’s one draughty
glasshouse.
After all, Mail Online
today is featuring such pro-woman content as Lacey Banghard promoting
her own range of condoms, Britney
Spears without a bra on, a Daisy
Lowe lingerie shoot, Katy
Perry in micro shorts, and Helen
Flanagan in tears after missing her flight (but fully clothed). So Jan Moir
and her editor have no room to call out anyone else for being “woman hating”.
And nor have they any
complaint about Ripper Street, except
that it’s on the BBC.
3 comments:
You would think Moir would appreciate that it's difficult to create a TV programme about the murders of countless women without it having at least a modicum of "woman hating". WTF did she expect, it's about a guy who murdered prostitutes. Maybe she should watch Babestation, they love women over there.
She claims that she tuned in hoping for something similar to Downton - a bog standard cosy costume drama. I have not seen anything in the publicity material or trailers to suggest that this was ever advertised as such. While the amount of gore or sex may have taken her by surprise, it was always billed as a gritty police procedural, and anyone with a passing knowledge of the period should have been able to fill in the blanks.
Criticise it all you like for being derivative of better works, from Alan Moore to James Ellroy, but false advertising? No. Still, I guess the BBC must appreciate the free publicity.
tim, you're being a bit harsh here, re moir's appearance. I personally couldn't care what she looks like (even if it's a million times away from her mail photo).
let's settle for: she works for dacre; she does his bidding; he pays well; she gave up long ago on the concept of journalisic integrity to keep up the mortgage repayments and stack up the pension pot.
ad hominem attacks traditionally belong to right-wing paranoids; let's not descend to this level, eh?
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