Headlines do not make much more emphatic claims: “Crackdown On BBC Gore” thundered the
increasingly threadbare and downmarket Sunday
Express this morning. And no other paper – not even the Mail or Telegraph, famed for their routine trashing of anything Beeb
related – had the story. So what was to be cracked down on, and when would it
happen?
File under fiction (again)
The article was unequivocal: “Government to act on BBC screen violence in hits such as The Fall andRipper Street ... THE BBC has been told by the Government it must make it
harder for children to watch disturbing ‘murder porn’ on their computers”.
This was because “youngsters are using
the BBC’s internet iPlayer service to watch scenes of appalling violence
against women”.
They are? So do a lot of youngsters do this? Ah, but this is
the Express,where the budget doesn’t
stretch to proper investigative journalism. So all that readers are told is
that “Latest figures show iPlayer gets an
average of 7.9 million hits a day. January and March saw a record 272 million
viewing requests”, which means that BBC iPlayer is very popular, but not
with whom.
Still, the Coalition really is going to get tough with the
Corporation, isn’t it? “A Government spokesman
said: ‘Clearly we look to the BBC to set the bar on greater child protection
from online scenes of graphic violence’” is about all the paper can muster
on that one. But the Culture Secretary “is
to meet internet providers on Tuesday to order bosses to weed out online child
porn”.
Which is all fine and dandy, but irrelevant to anything
broadcast in the UK. What is concerning Maria Miller on that front (considering
the article is supposed to be about it)? “Senior
sources say the Culture Secretary is also concerned about British shows aping a
trend in US drama for extreme on-screen violence, as in Sky shows such as The
Following and Hannibal”.
Right. So now we’re talking about broadcasters other than
the BBC. And there is rather a lot of space given over to lobby group Mediawatch-uk,
the successor to Mary Whitehouse’s National Viewers And Listeners Association
of old. What does not appear – at least, not until the end of the article – is what
the BBC is going to do, or be caused to do, about all the alleged “Gore”.
This may be because the answer does not match the headline: “Last night a BBC Trust spokeswoman said no
changes were planned for controls on the iPlayer as the Trust felt current
safeguards were adequate”. So the Government is not taking any action,
there won’t be a “crackdown”, and the
Beeb is changing nothing, thus demonstrating that the Express is peddling yet another pack of lies.
But it sells more papers, so that’ll be another Benchmark Of Excellence!
Sorry to go completely and utterly off topic- but does anyone know what has happened to Tabloidwatch?
ReplyDeleteNot sure. No posts for over a month, but Tabloid Watch had not been posting as much as before during April.
ReplyDeleteShame isn't it. Love Tabloidwatch
ReplyDelete