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| 8th September 2008 | Stephen Tall | <stephen@stephentall.org.uk> |
Ofcom: interfering busybodies or upholding standardsWritten by Stephen Tall on Thu 24th May 2007
Even before Big Brother 8 starts, its shallow spin-off Celebrity Big Brother is again hitting the headlines, following media regulator Ofcom's decision to order Channel 4 to apologise three times for showing footage of Bollywood star Shilpa Shetty being taunted by fellow contestants Jade Goody, Jack Tweedy and Jo O'Meara. My first reaction was one of concern - why should a regulator force a channel to apologise for screening individuals showing themselves in their true (and unattractive) colours? Jade telling Shilpa to "Fuck off home" was racist and deeply unpleasant - but that Jade felt this was an acceptable insult to hurl provided an insight into her character and standards, which is surely the point of a reality show like Big Brother. The public reaction - over-hyped by the media, who typically glorified in lambasting C4 while gleefully repeating the offensive remarks - demonstrated far better than any Ofcom ruling the contempt in which views such as Jade's are widely regarded by substantial numbers of the liberal, tolerant viewing public. However, I then read Ofcom's ruling - and it shows that what they took umbrage with C4 for was not the channel's decision to show some D-listers proving their tawdry ignorance, but that the show's producers had not seen all the relevant footage when they made the decision to broadcast Jade & co's remarks. Specifically, this included untransmitted footage of the racist trio's doubtless side-splitting attempts to work the word 'Paki' into a limerick. In Ofcom's judgement, C4 needed to be aware of this wider context before broadcasting incidents such as Jade's "Shilpa poppadom" comment, so that it could be placed in its full context. As Ofcom notes:
Seen in this light, Ofcom's ruling seems to me entirely sensible, even commendable. As viewers, we rely on C4 editing shows - whether entertainment reality like Big Brother, or serious documentaries like Dispatches - in a responsible, fair and balanced way. This requires producers and editors to be in possession of the full facts, so that the highlights package can be properly filtered and contextualised. This clearly didn't happen in the case of the latest Celebrity Big Brother, and there was the potential for viewers to be misled - to view Jade's racist remarks as isolated incidents erupting in the heat of the moment, rather than as exempla of the casual, careless but systematic bullying they in fact were.
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