Showing posts with label Louisa Compton. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Louisa Compton. Show all posts

Wednesday, 14 March 2018

Mentioned



The Telford story finally made it onto BBC One's News at Ten last night, at 10.25 pm...
Let's have a look at some of the day's other news stories now then: The leader of Telford and Wrekin Council in Shropshire is calling on the Home Secretary to order an independent public inquiry into cases of child sexual exploitation in the town. It follows reports claiming that hundreds of girls may have been abused in the town since the early 1980s.
That was it in its entirety.

Update: The story is actually on the BBC News Home page today:


The chosen angle is that West Mercia Police's Superintendent for Telford & Wrekin, Tom Harding, has claimed that the Sunday Mirror's story has been "sensationalised" and that the offenders aren't predominantly groups of 'Asian' men.

14.15 Update to an update: It's gone from the Home page now.

Further Update: One BBC programme has covered it though ('watertight oversight'), and its editor has a 'Gotcha!' for the Daily Mail:

Sunday, 4 June 2017

Liar, liar



The letter to the Times in the previous post (and Rod Liddle's piece) has aroused a bit of scepticism. Isn't it too good to be true? 

Things that are 'too good to be true' tend to go down very well with those who want to believe them. The problem for the rest of us is in trying to sort the truthful wheat from the untruthful chaff.

Take the case of Jake Painter, the lyricist behind Captain Ska's anti-Theresa May song 'Liar Liar'. 

He was on Emma Barnett's Radio 5 show last week and on the Victoria Derbyshire programme too, talking about his song and complaining about the BBC's refusal to play it in full during the general election - an act of 'censorship' which has outraged the massed legions of Corbynistas on Twitter. 

We're into an interesting area, impartiality-wise, here. What should the BBC do? 

Should it ban the song and be accused of bias by 'one side', or broadcast the song and be accused of bias by 'the other side'? (There's are, of course, more than 'both sides' to most 'complaints from both sides').

If the BBC bans the song but then allows the song's lyricist to criticise the BBC's decision on air (at least twice), doesn't that negate some of the criticism of the BBC that the song's supporters have? But won't it also arouse the ire of those who oppose the song's message and who, in this case at least, back the BBC's ban? 

As far as broadcasting the song in full it's a classic 'The BBC are damned if they do and damned if they don't' situation. They could never win with partisans of those 'two sides'.

'Complaints from both sides' indeed.

What though about the plugging of the song that came about by EB and VD's focus on it (including fairly extended clips from the song)? Was the BBC knowingly playing a canny game here? Was it both having its cake and eating it? Was it promoting the song by 'censoring' it and then promoting criticism of that 'censorship', thus giving it even more publicity? Or was it 'doing the BBC proud' by taking a correct stand and then allowing those oppose to its stand to then speak freely on the BBC's airwaves? 

It's tricky, isn't it (unless you're a blinkered partisan)? I'm not at all sure where I stand on this - and not ashamed to say so either. 

Anyhow, I've gone off track here, so back to the main point...

When Jake was appearing on the VD programme he made a statement which when viral with the Corbynistas on Twitter. An edited clip from the programme (of which a less-edited version can be found here) showing Jake claiming on air that the VD programme's editor has asked him "not to go too heavy on the Tories" during his appearance, something that was taken as yet more 'proof positive' of BBC bias in favour of the Tories

Yes, Jake is very bold in making that statement and the clip doing the rounds makes the BBC presenter sound as if she's slightly panicked and 'moving the debate on' (the less-edited version makes her seem far less panicked).

But the editor of the VD programme, Louisa Compton, says that she said no such thing:


So who's the 'Liar, Liar' here? The BBC editor and her colleague? Or Jake, the anti-austerity, Tory-hating activist? 

Like you, I've no way of knowing, having not been there. But I can guess.