The place where everyone hangs out, chats, gossips, and argues
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By Uglybob
#2428
questions i sent<br><br>1. will we ever hear moyles eurovision song?<br> 2. will you be playing any of the "will music remix"<br> this week?<br> 3. chris moyles complaints, is there a place online<br>you can see these, im bored and id like to look at<br>some prude saddoes yapping.<br> thanks<br> robert<br><br><br>his reply<br><br>1. That's down to Chris and Dave as it was a personal project outside <br>of<br>work. Once it's played on Radio 1 it becomes a BBC copyright so they're<br>holding back for a deal! <br><br>2. Not sure to be honest<br><br>3. Sadly not, it's a confidential document for programme makers. We get <br>a<br>lot less than you think, the last one was because someone didn't like <br>us<br>saying 'knockers'. <br><br>Hope that helps<br><br><br><br>by the way to modify this, todays review is up
#2430
good work ferret girl- it just shows that most of this country has far too much time in thier hands......<br><br>that reminds me - must write that letter to the council to complain about dog turd
#2441
Chris Moyles, Radio 1, 5 & 9 June 2001<br><br>This appeal related to a complaint that Chris Moyles had breached BBC guidelines on taste and decency by using offensive language and by subjecting his producer to public humiliation.<br><br>The Head of Programme Complaints did not uphold this complaint. The complainant appealed to the Programme Complaints Committee.<br><br>In addition to his specific complaints, he asked the Committee to consider his view that Chris Moyles "bends and breaks the guidelines because he knows he can get away with it".<br><br>The Committee's decision:<br>The Committee noted that these programmes achieved high listening among their 15-24 year-old target audience, and that the language used by Chris Moyles was, in line with the BBC Producers' Guidelines, relevant to the expectations and taste of this group.<br><br>With regard to the banter between Chris Moyles and his production team, the programme had become a radio show, with "characters" which had developed among the production team alongside the on-air persona cultivated by Chris Moyles himself. Regular listeners knew that they were not real and the Committee was satisfied that members of the team took his invective in good part.<br><br>The Committee investigated with Radio 1 management the complainant's view that Chris Moyles was allowed to break the BBC's guidelines with impunity. Despite the difficulty of managing his raw creative talent without sacrificing his ability to connect with the audience in an authentic way, they were satisfied that proper steps were being taken, in line with the Producers' Guidelines, to anticipate potential problems and minimise the risk of causing offence. These included - at Chris Moyles' own request - tailor-made training sessions on the Producers' Guidelines at which it was made plain to him what he could and could not say on air. An audit conducted by Radio 1 management indicated that most complaints about him were because listeners did not like his persona, not because they were offended by what he said.<br><br>The appeal was not upheld.
#2447
Well carry on then.....<br>I just say that you are lowering your self re: CMDB, to the level of the "geeks" that Moyles ridicules<br><br>Good luck anyway- if you can achieve it, then fair play<br>but i shan't use it. I don't want to have his kids
#2450
You should look at some of the Mark Radcliffe complaints!<br><br>There are pleanty more for M&L than Moyles.<br><br>pleanty of "Bollocks", "Billy Bollock Chops", "Shit", etc, etc..!<br><br>(I'm sure they'll be ***'d out)<br><br>M
#2452
Bad language<br><br>14. Chris Moyles, Radio 1, 24 January 2001<br><br>The complaint:<br>Two listeners complained of a parody of the ITV programme Popstars which included highly offensive language. Efforts to bleep the swear words had been ineffective, and the result was to accentuate rather than conceal them.<br><br>Finding:<br>The words in question were inadequately concealed and unacceptable in the context.<br><br>Further action:<br>The management of Radio 1 spoke to Chris Moyles and the producer of the programme, emphasising that the language had been unacceptable and reminding them of the relevant BBC guidelines<br><br>What parody are they talking about here?