RCTV Wrote:They also weren't keen that I had I just had a local Spanish licence rather than a national Spanish licence.
I can half understand Ofcom saying that if a channel is licensed for local broadcasting in one small area they would be acting outside the terms of that license if the broadcast more widely. It’s the same situation as if one of the local broadcasters being set up went national, or a local radio station decided it was going to broadcast footage on Sky. What I don’t see is what the country has to do with it or why Ofcom had any say in the matter.
Addison Wrote:Art/serious drama can and will make reference to the human body and the fact that we're sexual creatures, but such content is never an end in itself.
Some art/drama/documentary nudity is non-sexual and may be there to illustrate a specific point, like what skin cancer looks like. But some art IS erotic. Almost all dance is stylised fucking or a comeon. Some film and TV sex scenes are explicit (Betty Blue, Say You Love Me). The difference is that the scene is either minimal or a small part of the over production, so the audience will not be aroused all the way through. And lets be honest, some sex scenes are longer than strictly necessary because the producer or director is deliberately spicing it up.
No way do TV channels get permission to show artistic nudity in advance. That would make Ofcom a censor and they are clear they do not censor anything in advance. It would also prevent them from punishing a channel afterwards. There is a case on record of Playboy believing it had been given a green light only to be found in breach after. Ofcom tried to say they do not preapprove content and what was said was not approval, or guidance, or was unauthorised, something like that.
They might answer a general question in theoretical terms, but reserve the right to have a different opinion when they see the actual show. For example “Is it all right to zoom in on underpants that have a wide crotch” sounds OK, but what is they are flesh coloured? See through? Microscopically thin figure hugging spray on rubber? Pulled tight revealing cameltoe?
Ofcom seem to want it both ways. By consulting independent third parties, inviting young people, the Welsh, Scots and Irish to put their views they can claim they are following best practice. But they only listen to comments that support their view, making minor concessions, and gradually those independent voices that disagree with them are pushed aside. Imagine if the Conservative party had consultation forums. Initially they would attract people with a range of opinions, some antiTory but interested in politics and how the country runs and wanting to change things. After a few years the trades unionists and social welfare enthusiasts would have been marginalised and would drift away, only to be attacked later for “supporting Tories”.