• [NEWS] BBC told they should "rethink" the Politically Correct stupidity

    From Your Name@YourName@YourISP.com to rec.arts.tv on Fri Jan 30 11:05:49 2026
    From Newsgroup: rec.arts.tv


    What a NON-surprise ... ethnicity-swapping (and gender-swapping)
    characters was always an insanely stupid idea. It was done solely to
    meet quotas and appease the 'Politically Correct' whiners.



    BBC Told To Avoid "Clunky" Color-Blind Casting
    & "Preachy" Anti-Colonial Storylines In Drama Series
    ----------------------------------------------------
    The BBC has been urged to rethink color-blind casting "tokenism"
    and "preachy" storylines about the UK's colonial history in
    scripted series, according to a major study commissioned by the
    broadcaster.

    Conducted by former BAFTA chair Anne Morrison and ex-Ofcom
    executive Chris Banatvala, the thematic review of "portrayal and
    representation" across BBC output found that "clunky" depictions
    of race can cause more harm than good.

    The 80-page report revealed audience complaints about Doctor Who 
    casting Nathaniel Curtis as Sir Isaac Newton in the 60th
    anniversary special "Wild Blue Yonder," as well as the 2023 
    Agatha Christie series Murder Is Easy, which featured an
    allegory on colonialism.

    The review noted that colour-blind casting was a matter of
    controversy for commentators and some viewers. Urging
    commissioners to "consider their choices carefully," the report
    said that good intentions to increase diversity can lead to
    inauthentic outcomes - outcomes that can sometimes be damaging to
    the communities they are attempting to serve.

    "In depicting an anachronistic historical world in which people
    of colour are able to rise to the top of society as scientists,
    artists, courtiers and Lords of the Realm, there may be the
    unintended consequence of erasing the past exclusion and
    oppression of ethnic minorities and breeding complacency about
    their former opportunities," the review said.

    "What needs to be avoided is ethnic diversity which looks forced
    and tick box, and we found our interviewees of colour as emphatic
    on this point as those who were white."

    The report said that the BBC's efforts to measure representation
    should be done at a genre level, rather than on a show-by-show
    basis. It said current measurements can "lead to a sense that
    there needs to be a smattering of diversity in every programme
    which can lead to inauthentic portrayal." It added:

    "In some cases, this can look clunky, particularly in scripted."

    Authors Morrison and Banatvala also warned against "clunky"
    attempts to boost diversity in storytelling, pointing to the
    Christie adaptation Murder Is Easy, starring David Jonsson. At the
    time the series aired, director Meenu Gaur said that storytelling
    from West African Yoruba culture had informed sequences in the
    drama, saying it was a "great allegorical story about
    colonialism."

    The thematic review said: "Audiences are particularly unforgiving
    of this if it challenges their expectations of what they have
    switched on to see. If there's an Agatha Christie murder mystery
    over the Christmas period, they won't expect to be taken into
    anti-colonial struggles, alongside the country-house murder. Unless
    it's very skilfully done, there is a danger it will feel overly
    didactic and preachy, as if the viewer is being lectured or a point
    is being made heavy-handedly."

    The review was informed by a survey of 4,518 UK adults, interviews
    with 100 BBC employees and observers, and an analysis of BBC
    content over a year-long period to the end of March 2024. It said
    that authenticity was critical to content resonating with audiences,
    with successful BBC series cited in the research including Michaela
    Coel's I May Destroy You and Man Like Mobeen, created by Guz Khan.

    Yonder Consulting, which undertook audience research, said: "In terms
    of what made for 'poor' representation across the media landscape,
    participants across the breadth of the qualitative sample highlighted
    'tokenistic' representation of minority groups or perceived 'quota
    filling', in which attempts to represent felt incongruous, overdone
    or unnecessary."

    Yonder said that when on-screen diversity missed the mark, it could
    "drive people away" from the BBC. "Representation alone was not
    enough - people also expected deep and nuanced portrayal," it added.

    The BBC welcomed the findings and said it planned to "systematically"
    review upcoming content plans to "ensure underrepresented audience
    groups are reflected authentically." The BBC added that it would
    update its "measurement framework" in the coming months, potentially
    changing the way it monitors representation across shows.

    Kate Phillips, the BBC's chief content officer, said: "As this
    detailed and thoughtful review notes, much has been achieved since
    we pledged to move more BBC production and commissioning across the
    UK, but what is also clear is there is still more to do - both here
    and across the industry. We accept that challenge and we are
    committed to going further to meaningfully reflect the lives of the
    audiences we serve."

    BBC chair Samir Shah added: "It is vital the BBC authentically
    reflects the lives of all the communities, classes, and cultures
    across the UK. Decision-making must happen closer to audiences if we
    want to ensure that everyone feels represented and that the BBC
    remains an engine for growth within the creative industries."



    <https://www.gallifreyannewsroom.com/bbc-told-to-avoid-clunky-color-blind-casting-preachy-anti-colonial-storylines-in-drama-series/>





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  • From Rhino@no_offline_contact@example.com to rec.arts.tv on Thu Jan 29 23:20:15 2026
    From Newsgroup: rec.arts.tv

    On 2026-01-29 5:05 p.m., Your Name wrote:

    What a NON-surprise ... ethnicity-swapping (and gender-swapping)
    characters was always an insanely stupid idea. It was done solely to
    meet quotas and appease the 'Politically Correct' whiners.



       BBC Told To Avoid "Clunky" Color-Blind Casting
       & "Preachy" Anti-Colonial Storylines In Drama Series
       ----------------------------------------------------
       The BBC has been urged to rethink color-blind casting "tokenism"
       and "preachy" storylines about the UK's colonial history in
       scripted series, according to a major study commissioned by the
       broadcaster.

       Conducted by former BAFTA chair Anne Morrison and ex-Ofcom
       executive Chris Banatvala, the thematic review of "portrayal and
       representation" across BBC output found that "clunky" depictions
       of race can cause more harm than good.

       The 80-page report revealed audience complaints about Doctor Who
       casting Nathaniel Curtis as Sir Isaac Newton in the 60th
       anniversary special "Wild Blue Yonder," as well as the 2023
       Agatha Christie series Murder Is Easy, which featured an
       allegory on colonialism.

       The review noted that colour-blind casting was a matter of
       controversy for commentators and some viewers. Urging
       commissioners to "consider their choices carefully," the report
       said that good intentions to increase diversity can lead to
       inauthentic outcomes - outcomes that can sometimes be damaging to
       the communities they are attempting to serve.

       "In depicting an anachronistic historical world in which people
       of colour are able to rise to the top of society as scientists,
       artists, courtiers and Lords of the Realm, there may be the
       unintended consequence of erasing the past exclusion and
       oppression of ethnic minorities and breeding complacency about
       their former opportunities," the review said.

       "What needs to be avoided is ethnic diversity which looks forced
       and tick box, and we found our interviewees of colour as emphatic
       on this point as those who were white."

       The report said that the BBC's efforts to measure representation
       should be done at a genre level, rather than on a show-by-show
       basis. It said current measurements can "lead to a sense that
       there needs to be a smattering of diversity in every programme
       which can lead to inauthentic portrayal." It added:

       "In some cases, this can look clunky, particularly in scripted."

       Authors Morrison and Banatvala also warned against "clunky"
       attempts to boost diversity in storytelling, pointing to the
       Christie adaptation Murder Is Easy, starring David Jonsson. At the
       time the series aired, director Meenu Gaur said that storytelling
       from West African Yoruba culture had informed sequences in the
       drama, saying it was a "great allegorical story about
       colonialism."

       The thematic review said: "Audiences are particularly unforgiving
       of this if it challenges their expectations of what they have
       switched on to see. If there's an Agatha Christie murder mystery
       over the Christmas period, they won't expect to be taken into
       anti-colonial struggles, alongside the country-house murder. Unless
       it's very skilfully done, there is a danger it will feel overly
       didactic and preachy, as if the viewer is being lectured or a point
       is being made heavy-handedly."

       The review was informed by a survey of 4,518 UK adults, interviews
       with 100 BBC employees and observers, and an analysis of BBC
       content over a year-long period to the end of March 2024. It said
       that authenticity was critical to content resonating with audiences,
       with successful BBC series cited in the research including Michaela
       Coel's I May Destroy You and Man Like Mobeen, created by Guz Khan.

       Yonder Consulting, which undertook audience research, said: "In terms
       of what made for 'poor' representation across the media landscape,
       participants across the breadth of the qualitative sample highlighted
       'tokenistic' representation of minority groups or perceived 'quota
       filling', in which attempts to represent felt incongruous, overdone
       or unnecessary."

       Yonder said that when on-screen diversity missed the mark, it could
       "drive people away" from the BBC. "Representation alone was not
       enough - people also expected deep and nuanced portrayal," it added.

       The BBC welcomed the findings and said it planned to "systematically"
       review upcoming content plans to "ensure underrepresented audience
       groups are reflected authentically." The BBC added that it would
       update its "measurement framework" in the coming months, potentially
       changing the way it monitors representation across shows.

       Kate Phillips, the BBC's chief content officer, said: "As this
       detailed and thoughtful review notes, much has been achieved since
       we pledged to move more BBC production and commissioning across the
       UK, but what is also clear is there is still more to do - both here
       and across the industry. We accept that challenge and we are
       committed to going further to meaningfully reflect the lives of the
       audiences we serve."

       BBC chair Samir Shah added: "It is vital the BBC authentically
       reflects the lives of all the communities, classes, and cultures
       across the UK. Decision-making must happen closer to audiences if we
       want to ensure that everyone feels represented and that the BBC
       remains an engine for growth within the creative industries."


    <https://www.gallifreyannewsroom.com/bbc-told-to-avoid-clunky-color- blind-casting-preachy-anti-colonial-storylines-in-drama-series/>


    Given the BBC's appalling biases in news, surely caused by a pronounced Leftist/"progressive" slant that's almost universal there, I'm going to
    be shocked if they genuinely tone down the wokeness. I expect I'll see
    them say something negative about Hamas before they really drop the
    wokeness and THAT would likely be because Prime Minister Nigel Farage
    defunded the BBC. If they had to survive by producing things audiences actually wanted to see - rather than producing propaganda to please
    their own viewpoints - they would finally have to drop all this woke
    nonsense.
    --
    Rhino
    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From anim8rfsk@anim8rfsk@cox.net to rec.arts.tv on Thu Jan 29 23:44:23 2026
    From Newsgroup: rec.arts.tv

    Your Name <YourName@YourISP.com> wrote:

    What a NON-surprise ... ethnicity-swapping (and gender-swapping)
    characters was always an insanely stupid idea. It was done solely to
    meet quotas and appease the 'Politically Correct' whiners.



    BBC Told To Avoid "Clunky" Color-Blind Casting
    & "Preachy" Anti-Colonial Storylines In Drama Series
    ----------------------------------------------------
    The BBC has been urged to rethink color-blind casting "tokenism"
    and "preachy" storylines about the UK's colonial history in
    scripted series, according to a major study commissioned by the
    broadcaster.

    Conducted by former BAFTA chair Anne Morrison and ex-Ofcom
    executive Chris Banatvala, the thematic review of "portrayal and
    representation" across BBC output found that "clunky" depictions
    of race can cause more harm than good.

    The 80-page report revealed audience complaints about Doctor Who 
    casting Nathaniel Curtis as Sir Isaac Newton in the 60th

    YES!

    anniversary special "Wild Blue Yonder," as well as the 2023 
    Agatha Christie series Murder Is Easy, which featured an
    allegory on colonialism.

    The review noted that colour-blind casting was a matter of
    controversy for commentators and some viewers. Urging
    commissioners to "consider their choices carefully," the report
    said that good intentions to increase diversity can lead to
    inauthentic outcomes - outcomes that can sometimes be damaging to
    the communities they are attempting to serve.

    "In depicting an anachronistic historical world in which people
    of colour are able to rise to the top of society as scientists,
    artists, courtiers and Lords of the Realm, there may be the
    unintended consequence of erasing the past exclusion and
    oppression of ethnic minorities and breeding complacency about
    their former opportunities," the review said.

    "What needs to be avoided is ethnic diversity which looks forced
    and tick box, and we found our interviewees of colour as emphatic
    on this point as those who were white."

    The report said that the BBC's efforts to measure representation
    should be done at a genre level, rather than on a show-by-show
    basis. It said current measurements can "lead to a sense that
    there needs to be a smattering of diversity in every programme
    which can lead to inauthentic portrayal." It added:

    "In some cases, this can look clunky, particularly in scripted."

    Authors Morrison and Banatvala also warned against "clunky"
    attempts to boost diversity in storytelling, pointing to the
    Christie adaptation Murder Is Easy, starring David Jonsson. At the
    time the series aired, director Meenu Gaur said that storytelling
    from West African Yoruba culture had informed sequences in the
    drama, saying it was a "great allegorical story about
    colonialism."

    The thematic review said: "Audiences are particularly unforgiving
    of this if it challenges their expectations of what they have
    switched on to see. If there's an Agatha Christie murder mystery
    over the Christmas period, they won't expect to be taken into
    anti-colonial struggles, alongside the country-house murder. Unless
    it's very skilfully done, there is a danger it will feel overly
    didactic and preachy, as if the viewer is being lectured or a point
    is being made heavy-handedly."

    The review was informed by a survey of 4,518 UK adults, interviews
    with 100 BBC employees and observers, and an analysis of BBC
    content over a year-long period to the end of March 2024. It said
    that authenticity was critical to content resonating with audiences,
    with successful BBC series cited in the research including Michaela
    Coel's I May Destroy You and Man Like Mobeen, created by Guz Khan.

    Yonder Consulting, which undertook audience research, said: "In terms
    of what made for 'poor' representation across the media landscape,
    participants across the breadth of the qualitative sample highlighted
    'tokenistic' representation of minority groups or perceived 'quota
    filling', in which attempts to represent felt incongruous, overdone
    or unnecessary."

    Yonder said that when on-screen diversity missed the mark, it could
    "drive people away" from the BBC. "Representation alone was not
    enough - people also expected deep and nuanced portrayal," it added.

    The BBC welcomed the findings and said it planned to "systematically"
    review upcoming content plans to "ensure underrepresented audience
    groups are reflected authentically." The BBC added that it would
    update its "measurement framework" in the coming months, potentially
    changing the way it monitors representation across shows.

    Kate Phillips, the BBC's chief content officer, said: "As this
    detailed and thoughtful review notes, much has been achieved since
    we pledged to move more BBC production and commissioning across the
    UK, but what is also clear is there is still more to do - both here
    and across the industry. We accept that challenge and we are
    committed to going further to meaningfully reflect the lives of the
    audiences we serve."

    BBC chair Samir Shah added: "It is vital the BBC authentically
    reflects the lives of all the communities, classes, and cultures
    across the UK. Decision-making must happen closer to audiences if we
    want to ensure that everyone feels represented and that the BBC
    remains an engine for growth within the creative industries."



    <https://www.gallifreyannewsroom.com/bbc-told-to-avoid-clunky-color-blind-casting-preachy-anti-colonial-storylines-in-drama-series/>







    --
    The last thing I want to do is hurt you, but it is still on my list.
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  • From Eddie Haskell@gdgd@sqpjf.com to rec.arts.tv on Sat Jan 31 02:12:50 2026
    From Newsgroup: rec.arts.tv

    Your Name wrote:



    What a NON-surprise ... ethnicity-swapping (and gender-swapping)
    characters was always an insanely stupid idea. It was done solely to
    meet quotas and appease the 'Politically Correct' whiners.



    Assholes who refuse to get on board with our President's agenda need to be wiped out. And maybe it's time to cancel the midterms because they're all shit too. Call me sick and tired of all the things gays and trannies are doing to us white men. I voted for Trump and now all I hear is shit
    about trannies, cross dressers and queers. Shit we never heard of before Trump was elected.

    Look at some of the 'men' he's surrounded by. Most of them are jerking off over Stephen Millers well defined buttocks.
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