The place where everyone hangs out, chats, gossips, and argues
By A(The?)Dreem_Team_Fan
#97449
Someone mentioned a few days ago about that there was only 1 official complaint against Moyles; I think this is wrong....but for once I am sticking-up for Moyles and opening a can of whup-ass on these pathetic humourless w*nkers who make complaints..here is a few complaints made to the Broadcasting Standards Commission in their last few  bulletins:<P>Chris Moyles , 2 complaints for bad taste not upheld.<br>UK Top40 , 1 complaint for bad taste not upheld.   <br>Sara Cox , 2 complaints for sex/violence upheld.<br>And also numerous complaints against Radcliffe !!
By stevotrash
#97450
....and two complaints held up for being blindingly obvious towards the dreem teem<P>booooooooo<P>boooooooooo
By the_dr
#97451
Very funny.... just reading the BSC website, excellent. I recommend anybody to visit there is you need a laugh - http://www.bsc.org.uk/. I've been searching and I can't find any upheld complaints about Moyles.<P>Search for Moyles then click on the PDF version of the bultien. This is from a while back...<P>"Chris Moyles<br>BBC Radio 1, 15 April 1998, 0900-1200<br>The Complaint<br>A listener complained about sexual innuendo.<br>The Broadcaster’s Statement<br>The BBC said that the ‘laddish’ nature of this programme<br>was made clear from the start. The terms in which the<br>presenter gave his views on a Diet Coke advertisement<br>and summarised his producer’s romantic requirements<br>were very much in keeping with his overall style - blunt<br>and perhaps earthy, but essentially light-hearted.<br>The BSC’s Finding<br>A Standards Panel listened to the programme noting the<br>remarks made by the presenter. It took account of the<br>established format of the programme and its customary<br>content, and considered it had not exceeded acceptable<br>boundaries. The complaint was not upheld.<br>Not upheld CN 534"<P>the_dr
By the_dr
#97452
Heres a good one, not Moyles but very funny:<P>"Advertisement for Rowntree Fruit Pastilles<br>ITV, 1 July 2000, 1600<br>The Complaint<br>A viewer complained that this advertisement might<br>make vulnerable children believe that it was acceptable to<br>‘go off with strangers’.<br>The Broadcaster’s Statement<br>This advertisement featuring a fantastical fairy tale<br>setting was deemed acceptable by the BACC. The<br>advertisement could not be seen to encourage child<br>emulation and cause them to be less attentive about<br>talking to strangers.<br>The Commission’s Finding<br>A Standards Panel watched the advertisement. It took<br>the view that the content would not have encouraged<br>children to ‘go off with strangers’ and had not gone<br>beyond acceptable boundaries for broadcast. The<br>complaint was not upheld.<br>Not upheld CN 5275"
By Listener_no._1,564,326
#97454
Ha,Ha.....This is exactly what I was trying to point out; the sort of Politically Correct,Do-Gooding,humourless Cun....(Whoops,I mean 'Female Genitalia') who actually complain about stuff. Whether you like Moyles,Radcliffe etc. or not,I'm sure u lot are not actually offended by the 'taste' content in the shows.<br>If these people don't like it TURN IT OFF !!!!!<br>What I don't understand is the mentality of these people who complain...If you listen to Moyles you know what to expect...but do these people actually take time to phone up the BSC?? or even sadder,the people who WRITE a letter and TAKE TIME to BUY A STAMP and POST IT....<br>Jesus,these people are LOSERS !!!!!<br>Yours sincerely,<br>A(The?) Mark and Lard Fan(Who's forgotten his password)<br>
By winker
#97455
I agree. The off button on these peoples radio's/tv's must have got taken off at the shop.<P>They would better use the energy sticking a very large blunt object up their pipe.
By Guest
#97456
Dear BBC,<br>I am writng to complain about the Dream Team<br>Are they Talented.<br>Is the Pope Catholic?<br>May I suggest a replacement Anne Robinson. What I nice young lady.<P>Brigardier Gordon the Gopher Swing Top Bin, (MRS)
By the_dr
#97457
After trauling through the archieves of BSC to find an upheld Moyles complaint, I found this one:<P>Chris Moyles<br>BBC Radio 1, 14 January 1999, 1600-1800<br>The Complaint<br>A listener complained about racist remarks.<br>The Broadcaster’s Statement<br>The BBC said that the remark had been an unfortunate<br>lapse in a live show. There had been no intention to<br>encourage racist behaviour or attitudes.<br>The Commission’s Finding<br>A Standards Panel listened to the item. It took the view<br>that the presenter’s remark had gone beyond acceptable<br>boundaries for broadcast. The complaint was upheld.<br>Upheld CN 1923<P>Very unusual for Moyles.<P>the_dr
By Simon
#97458
Surely there was also the complaint about that woman who had (faked?) an orgasm live on air during the early bit?<br>
By Tom_Murphy
#97460
anyone know anything about that racism one? i also find it very strange, and quite disappointing. mind you, it could just be an anne robinson stylee remark about the scots, welsh etc. even though i am welsh i find this acceptable. any colour remarks cross the boundaries though. has anyone seen american history x? that film should be shown to primary school kids - it would banish racism forever.
By Mark_and_Lard_Fan
#97461
I totally agree with you Mr.Murphy,<br>there is a complete difference between light-hearted remarks against Scots,Welsh,Americans etc. and full-blown racism; racists are contemptible,pathetic scumbags....and although I regularily criticize Moyles,I also believe that he is not a racist,and wouldn't make a racist remark...it is probably as you say some remark against the Irish or something that some tight-anused listener complained about.
By the_dr
#97462
Totally agreed. There is definately a difference between Annes comments and racism. I found the report into it on the BSC:<br>Room 101<br>BBC2, 5 & 11 March 2001, 2200-2230 & 2145-2215<br>The Complaint<br>The Commission received 297 complaints about the first<br>broadcast of this programme and 130 following its<br>repeat. All the complainants expressed the same essential<br>concern; that remarks made by a guest on the<br>programme were racist. Related issues concerned the<br>effect on any children watching, the incitement of racial<br>hatred, racism masquerading as comedy and the reaction<br>of the audience.<br>The Broadcaster’s Statement<br>The BBC said that Room 101 had been a feature of its<br>comedy line-up for about seven years, and its humour<br>arose from a combination of what the guest wanted to<br>put in the “room”, and the presenter’s reaction. It was<br>essentially a light-hearted exercise in which the guest<br>admitted to dislikes which were usually either amusingly<br>trivial in themselves, or supported by arguments which<br>were equally insubstantial, and which were gently sent<br>up by the presenter. The humour was directed as much at<br>the foibles of the guests as at the subjects they proposed<br>to send to Room 101, and the frequent laughter of the<br>audience - as well as its occasional barracking for or<br>against a particular proposal - was a continual reminder<br>that the opinions expressed by the guest and the<br>presenter were not to be taken too seriously.<br>Turning to the specifics of this case, the BBC said that one<br>of the most important considerations was the basis on<br>which Anne Robinson explained her choice. She couched<br>what she said in terms of personal irritation, which is what<br>the convention of the programme required, and her<br>explanation began with her childhood experience of being<br>periodically surrounded by Welsh-speakers at her mother’s<br>market stall, which she evidently found disorienting. But it<br>soon emerged that her attitude was also based on grudging<br>respect for, and envy of, Welsh abilities.<br>The presenter repeatedly intervened with sardonic one-liners,<br>which kept the proceedings firmly within a<br>humorous framework and pointed up the comic<br>unreasonableness of Anne Robinson’s attitude (which she<br>herself was clearly playing up for humorous purposes).<br>The BBC said that its assessment might have been<br>different if the content of what Anne Robinson said had<br>been seriously belittling, or in any real sense a<br>condemnation of the Welsh. But her sharpest objection<br>seemed to be to people speaking their native language,<br>which would strike viewers in general as too manifestly<br>absurd to carry any critical sting. She exploited the<br>latitude for banter among the home nations without<br>crossing the line into hurtful stereotyping or unacceptable<br>suggestions of inferiority. The back-announcement by<br>Presentation was an appropriately humorous reflection of<br>those circumstances.<br>The Commission’s Finding<br>The Standards Committee watched the programme, now<br>well-established and well known for its brand of humour,<br>and considered carefully the various points made by the<br>complainants. It noted that the guest on this occasion<br>was currently enjoying a high profile for her notoriously<br>abrupt and challenging style. The Committee took the<br>view that the comments she made were deliberately<br>intended to be provocative; stereotypes of the Welsh, for<br>example that they were clever, good at rugby and singing,<br>were invoked, but without negative associations.<br>It considered that, whilst maintaining the lighthearted<br>mood of the programme, the presenter subtly<br>undermined her position (be it real or adopted) by<br>pointing up the absurdity of much of what she was<br>saying, for example, that it was annoying of the Welsh to<br>have the nerve to speak their own language in their own<br>country. He also resisted the audience’s encouragement to<br>put the Welsh in Room 101, even if he played with their<br>reactions for a few seconds for comic effect.<br>The Committee also took into account Wales’ position as<br>a constituent nation of the UK and its achievements, both<br>historical and current, which the Committee considered<br>gave it a strength and resilience not available to other,<br>more vulnerable groups.<br>The Commission has in the past expressed concern about<br>occasions on which robust humour between the various<br>national communities, part of a long established tradition<br>within the British Isles, has tipped over into crude and<br>gratuitously offensive stereotypes and it would still be<br>concerned about any move to a reliance on the use of<br>such humour. Although the guest’s rhetorical question<br>“What are [the Welsh] for?” came close to the<br>boundaries of acceptability, the Committee took the view<br>that neither the overall content nor the style of this<br>programme was inherently racist. The complaints were<br>not upheld.<br>Not upheld CN 6373.297/6449.130<P>the_dr
User avatar
By Gaspode_The_Wonder_Dog
#97463
this thread draws two questions for me:<P>1. has dr got nothing better to do?<br>2. What ARE the welsh actually for?
By Mark_and_Lard_Fan
#97464
Lamacq Live<br>BBC Radio 1, 30 November 1998, 2000-0000<br>The Complaint<br>A listener complained about the use of bad language.<br>The Broadcaster’s Statement<br>The BBC apologised for the inadvertent inclusion<br>of the word ‘****’ in the programme. However, it said<br>that the word had been transmitted late in the evening<br>and that the artist, Snoop Dog, who was quoted on<br>the programme, was known for his liberal use of strong<br>language. Those people who were interested in hearing<br>the report of events at his concert would have been<br>more likely than other listeners to accept that language<br>in such a context.
By Andrew
#97466
Chris Moyles<br>BBC Radio 1, 12 November 1998, 2000-0000<br>The Complaint<br>A listener complained about the use of bad language from a guest on the show, Roy "Chubby" Brown<br>The Broadcaster’s Statement<br>**** off. There is no ****ing way that his ****ing bad ****ing language has any effect on vulnerable minds.<br>Go **** your dad
By the_dr
#97467
Is it just me or is Chubby Brown the most vulgar, unfunny, sexist, disgusting person ever to be branded as a 'comedian'. I don't find gentialia very amusing - therefore his 'humor' does not appeal to me. His appearence on the League of Gentleman was quite good, but why do they, and Moyles like him so much? There are far funnier people around than Mr. Royston Vasey.<P>the_dr
By Andrew
#97468
As Moyles always says,"Most good jokes you know are Chubby Brown's"<P>Arsene Wenger and Alex Ferguson walk into a bar. <br>A woman runs up to Arsene puls her top down and asks him <br>to sign him to sign her tits. Arsene says "sure" <br>and does it. <br>A few minutes later another woman runs over to him, <br>she turns round pulls her pants down and asks him to sign <br>her arse. Arsene is quite happy and does it. <br>A third woman runs up to Arsene,She pulls her trousers down and <br>says can you sign this? <br>Arsene says "Sorry only Alex Furguson signs <br>C.unts

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