StanTheMan
Banned
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RE: Ofcom - Current Investigations
(27-07-2011 16:24 )mikedafc Wrote: Are Ofcom investigating Channel 4 for its Sex Education Show which shows explicit nudity before the official 9pm watershed?
The makers of this show are obvioulsy aware that the show may offend because they warn of full frontal nudity throughout. Now, if this warning is something Ofcom have insisted on, I find it odd that they then go and allow it to be broadcast before the watershed.
So using my warped logic, does it not follow that if the babeshows started warning of explicit nudity, Ofcom should allow it, particularly AFTER the watershed??
Incidently, I just tried watching an episode on the C4 website, but gave up after being forced to sit through a series of 30 second adverts. When the third one started I came away
(This post was last modified: 27-07-2011 17:44 by StanTheMan.)
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27-07-2011 17:39 |
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mrmann
Posting Machine
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RE: Ofcom - Current Investigations
(27-07-2011 17:39 )StanTheMan Wrote: (27-07-2011 16:24 )mikedafc Wrote: Are Ofcom investigating Channel 4 for its Sex Education Show which shows explicit nudity before the official 9pm watershed?
The makers of this show are obvioulsy aware that the show may offend because they warn of full frontal nudity throughout. Now, if this warning is something Ofcom have insisted on, I find it odd that they then go and allow it to be broadcast before the watershed.
So using my warped logic, does it not follow that if the babeshows started warning of explicit nudity, Ofcom should allow it, particularly AFTER the watershed??
Incidently, I just tried watching an episode on the C4 website, but gave up after being forced to sit through a series of 30 second adverts. When the third one started I came away
I saw this too, and the bit about the percentage of people who use handcuffs during sex was very educational
Ofcom will do as they please, and will continue to be hypocrites as usual, continuing to make money from the babe channels as always.
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27-07-2011 21:53 |
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eccles
custodes qui custodiet
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Joined: May 2010
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RE: Ofcom - Current Investigations
New broadcast bulletin out today. Here are the highlights.
Sunrise TV "Your Health": Viewers were invited to phone in at £1.50 a minute for health advice. At no point were they advised to consult their GP. "Ofcom considered that it was „participation TV‟ (“PTV”) programming, as it was clearly formulated principally to take advantage of premium rate telephony revenues. ... while the broadcasts were PTV content, the studio presentation was editorial in style." Sunrise decided to pull the show. "this is the sixth breach Finding recorded by Ofcom against Sunrise TV over the past 15 months, all of which have concerned the broadcast of promotional material. ...further breach of this nature is likely to result in our consideration of the imposition of statutory sanctions."
6 similar offences and they just get a warning.
South For You: Provision of recordings. Ofcom formally asked ... to provide recordings ... The Licensee failed to acknowledge Ofcom‟s request or provide recordings ... on three occasions. Eventually recordings were supplied with an apology and explanation. Ofcom will monitor.
Eastenders: Dead baby story over 3 1/2 months. "EastEnders is a long-running and well established drama with a record of tackling controversial and, at times, highly sensitive social issues." (translation: patronising moralising crap). Ofcom received 1,044 complaints from viewers ... inaccurate, insensitive and sensationalised portrayal of the behaviour of a mother who has lost a baby from cot death ... “distressing” and “horrific”. "Ofcom considered that in this case it would not be possible to assess whether the Code had been breached until the storyline had concluded. This was because Ofcom needed to take into account the full context in which the baby swap storyline was featured." ... "Ofcom did not consider it necessary to seek the BBC‟s formal comments before reaching a decision in this case."
Ofcom felt that overall the content was justified bycontext.
Multiple breaches of the COSTA advertising code. No suggestion that the channels that broadcast extra adverts should forefit some advertising time. Examples include Bloomberg that had 3 internal ad breaks in a 30 minute show (2 allowed) and 8, yes 8, in a 90 minute show (5 allowed).
Other programs not in breach included:
Äntligen fredag - TV3 - Sexual material
IslamiQA - Islam Channel - Religious/Beliefs discrimination/offence
Psychic Interactive - Psychic TV - Participation TV - "Misleadingness"
Strange Sex Promo - DMAX - Sexual material
Complaints assessed but not further investigated included:
Britain's Next Top Model - Sky Livingit - Nudity
Bruno Mars "The Lazy Song" - 12 separate broadcasts - Sexual material/Offensive language/Generally accepted standards
Elite Nights - Elite TV - Participation TV - Offence
Embarrassing Bodies - Channel 4 (3 broadcasts) - Nudity/Materially misleading
Emmerdale - UTV/ITV1 (3 broadcasts) - Generally accepted standards
In with the Flynns - BBC1 - Sexual material
Midsomer Murders - ITV1 - Nudity (Im not making this up)
Undercover Boss (trailer) - Channel 4 - Sexual material
Investigations launched include:
Nittileaks - Kanal 5
The Sex Researchers - Channel 4
The BBC Eastenders complaint numbers do not include the 13,400 people who complained direct to the BBC.
So there you have it. 14,444 complaints are OK if the plot justifies it, but zero complaints can be grounds for a fine because of some theoretical non existent possibility of harm or offence.
Gone fishing
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01-08-2011 22:56 |
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