BBC Views Online’s Entertainment

page trumpets Does Islam have a sense of humour? – a happy story, illustrated with a glossy library picture of burka clad girls (with one peeking out to smile at the camera), where:

Keen comedy fan Tosifa Mustafa nails a widely-held stereotype, before dismissing it in the same breath. It’s “just not the case,” she says.

Protests over cartoons satirising the Prophet Muhammad combined with images of Muslims criticising frivolous aspects of Western culture have left the impression for some that Islam and comedy are incompatible.

And as with most stereotypes, there is a kernel of truth. In some Islamic societies entertainment – music, film and comedy – are forbidden.

Gotta love the understatement and juxtaposition of the last two paragraphs. “Protests over cartoons satirising the Prophet Muhammad” is just a bit milder than the reality, as BBC Views Online well knows. Murderous threats on the streets of London, murder, death threats, people in hiding, uncontained anger and aggression and widespread destruction of property just about covers it – just a bit more than the “kernel of truth” our fearless Views Online Beeboids think they can get away with…

Update: Biased BBC reader Pounce points out that the BBC have somehow managed to miss out some relevant background to their cheery report on the muslim comedians of the Allah Made Me Funny show: University ban on Muslim comedy attacked:

MUSLIM comedians have been banned from performing at a Scottish university in a move described as “ridiculous and undemocratic”.

Glasgow Caledonian University backed out of hosting Allah Made Me Funny: The Official Muslim Comedy Tour this month after complaints from its Muslim students’ association…

A spokeswoman for Glasgow Caledonian University said: “The university’s responsibility is to listen to and respect the views of all students on campus.

“When the Muslim Students’ Association expressed reservations about the show, it was decided the booking would not go ahead.”

Climb Every Mountain ….

Or not, as the case may be.

For Griff Rhys Jones, it was a high point of his television career. He had scaled the tallest mountain in Britain, the cameras rolling all the while, and last night he learnt that he had won a coveted Scottish Bafta award for the resultant series, Mountain.

But even as the series was receiving the plaudits of the critics, doubts were beginning to surface in the climbing world. Mountain had won the category of Best Factual Entertainment Programme — but one mountaineering expert commented last night: “Entertainment, certainly — but factual?”

Did Rhys Jones actually get to the top of Ben Nevis? Or was this another of the BBC’s minor deceptions, along with all the other controversies such as fake phone-ins, the naming of the Blue Peter cat and the trailer that wrongly claimed to show the Queen storming out of a photo shoot?

The BBC does seem to be making a habit of this sort of thing.

General BBC-related comment thread:

Please use this thread for comments about the BBC’s current programming and activities. This post will remain at or near the top of the blog – scroll down for new topic-specific posts. N.B. this is not an invitation for general off-topic comments, rants or chit-chat. Thoughtful comments are encouraged. Comments may be moderated.

For crying out loud, Now BBC fakes sound of babies crying on quintuplet film

:

Sky and ITN ran clips of the footage without the audio, the BBC’s footage contains the sound of children crying, even though the babies have respirators in their mouths.

A spokeswoman for the Oxford hospital said: “There was no audio on our clip.”

“The BBC must have put it over.”

“I thought they weren’t supposed to do things like that.”

A BBC spokesman said the corporation should have left the footage alone.

He said: “We received the film without sound and on reflection we should have kept it that way.”

The sound of babies crying has now been removed from the story for its viewing on the Six O’Clock News.

This latest demonstration of the BBC’s attachment to manufacturing ‘the truth’, fake but accurate style, was briefly mentioned at the end of last night’s Newsnight, though wasn’t newsworthy enough to rate a mention, nor even an apology on the BBC’s Six or Ten O’Clock news broadcasts. Strange that. Would anyone care to bet on the likelihood of an apology on today’s One O’Clock news broadcast? Anyone?

Thank you to Biased BBC reader Bernard W. for the link.

John A, formerly of the respected Climate Audit blog

, has submitted comments to the BBC in response to their current, doubtless passing, interest of sorts, in the arguments against reducing Western Civilization to subsistence farming as a means to avoid the fiery fate predicted by legions of global warming doom mongers.

Just in case his comments, for some predictable reason, don’t make it past the BBC’s censors, he’s posted them on his blog, BBC Black Propaganda #1 and BBC Black Propaganda #2 – interesting rebuttals worth a read.

Update (4pm): Coming up on 24 hours ago I submitted a comment in response to Steve Herrman, Editor of the BBC News website, and his post on the BBC Editors Blog, Climate Sceptics, yesterday. Lots of comments have appeared since then, but for some strange reason, mine, a perfectly reasonable, germane and on-topic comment, hasn’t. This is what I said:

Jeremy Paxman summed up the BBC approach quite succinctly:

“People who know a lot more than I do may be right when they claim that [global warming] is the consequence of our own behaviour. I assume that this is why the BBC’s coverage of the issue abandoned the pretence of impartiality long ago”,
Jeremy Paxman, Media Guardian, January 31st, 2007.

Scary stuff indeed! Perhaps Mr. Herrman or one of his minions would care to explain why this comment isn’t fit for publication on the BBC Editors Blog.

Keen on filing Freedom of Information requests and complaining, rightly, when public bodies prevaricate

, the BBC is getting a reputation of its own for prevaricating over Freedom of Information requests to the BBC by and on behalf of the tellytaxpaying public.

Not content with its infamy (and sheer hypocrisy) for spending hundreds of thousands of tellytaxpayer pounds on legal action to withhold the Balen Report from the scrutiny of the public who paid for it, the BBC’s now doing its utmost to cover up whether or not its presenters are being paid for their work on Children in Need, the BBC’s annual charity telethon.

The Belfast Telegraph reports, Do they get paid for Pudsey?, that:

The corporation was forced to disclose within the past year that Sir Terry Wogan received an “honorarium” for anchoring the network-wide sections of the annual charity extravanganza.

But it has turned down a similar Freedom of Information (FoI) request from this newspaper relating to presenters on the Northern Ireland wing of the show.

Read the rest of the article for more details on the BBC’s machinations. Hat tip to Tony Sharp for posting Accountability BBC style on his blog, The Waendal Journal.

“This Time it is Personal”

announces Yasmin Alibhai-Brown (aka ‘The Yazzmonster’):

“It is personal guys. Several BBC broadcasters tell me they are not interested in ‘Guardian and Independent’ points of view. We are passé, irrelevant, annoying, elitist, too middle class and soft. Fashion moves on, the culture is now noisy and intolerant and the Beeb follows, is too feeble to stand up to ugly populism.

Many of us have-beens are no longer invited on to the robust debates on programmes where intelligent political debate should take place. Belligerence is sought- bring on the alpha right wingers like William Shawcross and bombastic Jeff Randall. Soon a Jeremy Clarkson mascot will replace Pudsy. Have a box of pins ready.

It is serious too guys – it will shape the nation over the next ten years. They diss the only consistently left of centre papers in the country – and so ditch the European Union, internationalism, multilateralism, fair immigration policies, equality, regulation, redistribution, legitimate (as opposed to illegal) wars”.

So what do we think? Does Yazza, as always, have her finger on the pulse? Is it time to close down the blog? Or should we hand it over to the leftoids so that they can take over? It’s a difficult one.

General BBC-related comment thread:

Please use this thread for comments about the BBC’s current programming and activities. This post will remain at or near the top of the blog – scroll down for new topic-specific posts. N.B. this is not an invitation for general off-topic comments, rants or chit-chat. Thoughtful comments are encouraged. Comments may be moderated.

The Today Programme …

Sarah Montague (for it is she, 15 minutes in (RealAudio)) : “Sean Penn, we’ve discussed your new film, now tell us about your politics, you’re known for your strong views, you’re opposed to the Iraq war, you’re opposed to the way America’s dealing with Iran … why aren’t your films more overtly political ?”

SP: “There’s nothing more political than to be proactively human …”

SM: “And your project for Iran is to .. to get the way that America – the administration – President Bush’s administration – is dealing with it changed. What would you have them do ?”

SP: “Understand that people are people everywhere … shared humanity that we all have …”

SM: “But President Bush wouldn’t say that”

SP: “Yes, he would lie that way … spin and fear … people give in to letting killers kill”

SM:
“Sean Penn, it took a long time, but we got there in the end. Thank you.”

James Naughtie (for it is he, 20 mins in (RealAudio) : “You will know that Norman Mailer is dead … well last year he wrote a book about the trials and tribulations of George W. Bush … here’s a reminder of what he said …”

The late NM: “Bush uses “evil” as a narcotic …”

JN: “And there’s plenty more where that came from – you can hear the whole thing on our website”

This may not be a verbatim transcript. But it “illustrates a wider truth”.

(See also Ry Cooder, Burt Bacharach, Randy Newman, John Prine, Patti Smith).

BBC screws up

I don’t approve of taxpayers having to fund big sporting events but I am glad that Glasgow has won the 2014 Commonwealth Games. Better that our money be spent on infrastructure than most other state boondoggles.

And one of those beneficiaries of the state is the BBC.

Isn’t it astounding that the Beeb managed to screw up Glasgow’s big moment?

BBC Scotland last night apologised after missing the moment of Glasgow’s Commonwealth Games victory

Come on now – it’s not like it’s every day that the Queen gets invited to Celtic Park.