They were pert. Ever so pert. And a little pointy, yet still fulsome... I'll stop before I start getting carried away there!
Thank you, Light Entertainment, for another very well-considered and eminently readable response. I'm in full agreement with everything you've said above.
It's a sad but well-known truth that the professional complainers create trouble and discord out of a lack of much else to do - they are the germs of society, spreading social colds that sap our freedom and joy on an irregular but annoyingly all-too-frequent basis. It would be better if they all learned to appreciate this wonderful world and ceased their self-important ways, having understood that the world doesn't owe them the duty of keeping them and them only satisfied and 'unoffended'.
The commas are an indication that I don't believe that these folk are necessarily always upset but that, as you've suggested, they're rather like sharks in that they will bite if they sense blood or weakness.
Sadly, as you say, niche programming is horrendously vulnerable to such attacks as an entire channel's
raison d'etre then comes under fire. Thus, caution is to be expected.
I think that a large number of us held Bang Media largely accountable for two things:
1) The undoing of their operation.
2) The new Ofcom rules.
In fact, we can be in hardly any doubt of it.
I suspect that, in time, we'll all come to respect the so-slated "tame shows" for keeping the 900's alive and broadcasting.
But the ironic juxtaposition of the public's perception of the adult industry (and how it can be/is depicted in television drama) and the sad reality of what The Industry is actually allowed to do on tv really does irk me, to a considerable degree.
I think we all tacitly accept that our wishes are seldom going to be in line with the reality of the babeshows, but my (slightly ironic) post was intended more than anything to provoke. Hopefully, to provoke other forum members into joining in doing what Eccles has been diligently doing for some time now - logging the inconsistencies and highlighting the inequalities that exist in the realm of broadcasting regulations, so that some kind of back catalogue, a kind of case-law, exists for concerned parties to use as ammunition against the disinterested, the uncaring, the useless and the misguided who find themselves busy censoring what amounts to harmless fun, for the sake of appeasing those malcontents who continually raise their phoney objections to anything that might allow a slice of the populace to otherwise have some legitimate fun.
And who knows, maybe one day we'll be thanking the regulators for finally allowing us what we want, and the shows will meet our expectations?
And perhaps I'll learn to construct shorter sentences.