(27-10-2009 20:54 )TheDarkKnight Wrote: The way I understand it is the reason broadcasters don't fight the regulations is purely financial. It costs a lot of money to go to the hight court.
But that begs the question...what is the appeals procedure? Who does a broadcaster appeal to?
Which brings it back to the channels needing to utilise the people they do have on their side better than they do.
What do they do to argue their case? Do they go beyond Ofcom to do that? Who can we, as viewers, put pressure on to state the case.
I don't know what the nightly viewing figures are for these channels but just say they're 50,000 per channel. On the night in question mentioned in that Ofcom report, that's 49,999 people who weren't offended by what they were seeing compared to 1 that was. Why should that one voice hold so much more power than the 49,999 others?
I could maybe see slight justification if this was a terrestrial channel where someone could have been taken unaware by it but on an adult channel where everyone knows what they're getting? It's a joke.
Then we get to the "intrusive" argument. The model in question clearly didn't feel it was intrusive, the vast majority of viewers whose "expectations" seem so important didn't regard it as intrusive, yet one complainant and whoever run the rule over it for Ofcom make the decision for everyone else including the girl herself.
It's just another nonsensical attempt by Ofcom to justify their position. The other month we had complaints about that life art programme shown at dinner time on Channel 4. This was deemed to be acceptable by Ofcom despite them having used the minors argument against the babe channels for years. A programme showing full frontal nudity, on a terrestrial channel, at a time when a lot of children could have been watching was deemed to be acceptable but a channel showing topless nudity in an adult section after the watershed is always walking along a tightrope. That programme also generated a lot more complaints over a week than the combined babe channels do over a year.
Now we have this "viewer expectation" argument when the majority of viewers would actually expect something a lot harder from an adult channel at that time of night.
Maybe it is a question of expense for the channels taking it to higher legal authorities but going on every Ofcom argument and stance so far, I'd say any court hearing would be over in 20 minutes with Ofcom's arguments being torn to pieces.