The Mail on Sunday

A woke j oke... proof that BBC hands 75pc of its comedy slots to Left-wingers

- By Glen Owen POLITICAL EDITOR

THE scale of the BBC’s Left-wing comedy bias is laid bare for the first time today in an audit of its entertainm­ent output.

Research seen by The Mail on Sunday shows that out of 364 comedy slots broadcast by the BBC over the past month, just four featured comedians with explicitly Conservati­ve or pro-Brexit views.

By contrast, a total of 268 slots were filled by comedians with publicly pronounced, Left-leaning or ‘woke’ views, such as Nish Kumar, Adam Hills and Shappi Khorsandi.

Kumar, who appears on The Mini Mash Report, makes Right-leaning politician­s the butt of jokes, on one occasion yelling ‘F*** you, Boris Johnson!’ to audience cheers.

The findings come as Tory MPs are lobbying Boris Johnson to fight back against the BBC’s ‘politicall­y correct’ agenda.

More than 25 of them, led by senior backbenche­r and ex-Minister Sir John Hayes, wrote to the Prime Minister last month to urge him to decriminal­ise the licence fee to ‘defend British traditions and values...to stand against the senseless woke whingers

‘It’s obvious there is a definite bias against Conservati­ves’

and the soulless militants who despise the best of Britain’.

The audit by the Campaign For Common Sense (CCS) found that out of 364 slots on BBC 1, BBC 2 and Radio 4 over the past month, a total of 268 slots – 74 per cent – were given to 99 comedians with ‘woke’ views.

It has prompted Mark Lehain, director of the CCS, to write to new BBC directorge­neral Tim Davie to call on him to tackle bias in BBC comedy.

Mr Lehain said: ‘The BBC says it wants to improve the diversity of output. The reality is our comedy shows are awash with “woke” jokes and there is nothing funny about such flagrant bias. Our research reveals primetime comedy shows are dominated by comedians who broadly share the same outlook and views on politics, Brexit and Britain and simply don’t reflect the wide range of opinions held by the viewers they seek to entertain.

‘There are loads of talented comics out there holding small-‘c’ conservati­ve, anti-‘ woke’ and proBrexit views. The issue is they just aren’t getting booked by the BBC.’

Mr Davie has admitted that the BBC’s focus ‘must be to ensure that we deliver outstandin­g and unique value to all audiences’.

Comedian Leo Kearse claims to have been snubbed by the BBC because he is ‘one of the minorities forgotten by the Corporatio­n – a Right-wing comedian’, adding: ‘It has long been obvious to anyone watching panel shows, sketch shows or sitcoms on British telly that there is a definite bias against Conservati­ves – and, let’s face it, working-class people. This gigantic monolith that we all have to pay for or go to jail oozes a liberal, Oxbridge-educated, metropolit­an elite agenda at every pore.’

Mr Kearse complains that Leftwing comedians such as Mr Kumar ‘all come out with the same stuff – Boris Johnson and Donald Trump have silly hair and are stupid’.

The report’s authors highlight examples of ‘non-woke’ comedians who they think should be given more of an airing by the BBC, including Scott Capurro, whose anti-woke material includes: ‘Are there any radical Muslim fundamenta­lists in tonight? They’re always dying for attention.’ Another is Tania Edwards, who jokes: ‘I think having a referendum on Brexit was a mistake, I do. I think it’s like asking your husband if he wants a threesome for his 40th. He was supposed to say No.’

The BBC said: ‘We don’t analyse our comedy by comparing numbers. We judge i t on i t being funny, how popular it is and whether it reflects a range of different voices and views.’

Great comedy offends people but the BBC’s too terrified to make it: Laurence Marks – Page 27

FOR the past 40 years, I’ve taken television rather seriously. Week by week, I went through my copy of the Radio Times with a pen, circling the programmes I wanted to watch, often scribbling notes. However, these days I can scarcely be bothered, so woefully unimaginat­ive are the offerings from the two principal broadcaste­rs and, in particular, the BBC, which should know better.

I still think of television as an object of brightness and joy, the way it used to be when I was growing up, but I only have to look at the new Christmas schedules to see how far it’s fallen.

What should be a sparkling gift to the nation is instead a monotonous parade of talking heads and game shows, cakes baked, capes being sewn, ‘ celebritie­s’ I’ve never heard of. I have spent £157.50 on the licence fee, and I feel short-changed.

There are myriad reasons for this sad state of affairs, from the big changes sweeping society to a culture of terror in the BBC. But at the heart of it all, is the refusal to make real, laugh-out-loud comedy.

It is irreverent, irrepressi­ble humour that brings us together as viewers and as a nation, particular­ly at a time like Christmas and New Year, and even more so when we are imprisoned by lockdowns. Human foibles are timeless.

Skilful comedy is timeless. Yet proper humour is the very thing that the terrestria­l broadcaste­rs fear.

Hard- hitting comedy offends people, and offence is verboten in a world where virtue signalling and identity politics have gained a strangleho­ld over what we can write, see and think.

How else may we explain the extraordin­ary decision to make Dawn French (pictured above), as the Vicar of Dibley, sign up to the Black Lives Matter protests and ‘take the knee’? This isn’t comedy, it’s preaching. And what are we to make of the revelation in today’s Mail on Sunday that, of the hundreds of comedy slots broadcast by the BBC over the past month, nearly three-quarters were given over to comedians with overtly ‘woke’ views?

As a journalist in East Berlin in the 1970s, I understood quite plainly that I had to be most careful with what I said and did. The last thing I would have imagined was similar regulation­s would eventually apply in my homeland.

Take a popular show from the past, Blackadder. A new episode on Christmas night would have cleared the board, but can you imagine its writers, Ben Elton and Richard Curtis, being granted licence to pen such a series now? Every time Edmund slapped Baldrick around the face because he’s a – all right, I’ll dare say it – cretin, there would be a Twitter storm. Could Ben and Richard refer to Captain Darling as ‘darling’ without being labelled a sexist?

Or consider The New Statesman, the award-winning ITV political sitcom I wrote with Maurice Gran in the 1980s and 1990s. Alan B’Stard MP, played by the late, great Rik Mayall, was as offensive as anyone had been on TV, yet Yorkshire Television’s lawyers only ever vetoed one episode – about B’Stard selling nuclear weapons to Saddam Hussein, due to be broadcast just before the first Iraq War began.

Nobody would go near The New Statesman today. B’Stard would have drawn 5,000 viewers’ letters and 25,000 tweets with every utterance. How dare he use the word ‘black’ when describing his shoes?

Sadly, I predicted all this 20 years ago when, with my writing partner Maurice, we foresaw the decline of terrestria­l television in the keynote speech at the Edinburgh Internatio­nal Television Festival.

We said people would pay for channels that featured great shows they actually wanted to watch. We said the BBC’s schedule would end up filled with cheap ‘people shows’ in place of scripted light entertainm­ent and drama. It saddens me to say we were right.

There are many forces at play. The divide between big city and provincial viewers has become ever wider. I am not the first to say that the BBC appears to be in the grip of young, metropolit­an types who favour a diet of politicall­y correct and suitably diverse programmin­g. We are a big country and it is certainly diverse. But today’s BBC seems to have no idea what a 60-year-old woman in Kettering or King’s Lynn wishes to watch. Or perhaps it hasn’t done its homework.

There is also competitio­n from ‘ disruptors’ such as Netflix and Amazon Prime, which seem determined to put traditiona­l TV out of business altogether, although it is my prophecy that the BBC will be around long after Netflix.

Establishe­d broadcaste­rs are quite right t o complain t hese rivals seem impervious to public opinion. Just take Netflix’s refusal to take the simple step of telling viewers that The Crown combines fiction with fact.

Netflix makes gigantic losses and, unlike traditiona­l channels, seems immune to viewing figures.

The fact remains, though, that Amazon, Sky and Netflix produce some truly admirable drama, and the public is faced with a choice: would people rather watch imaginativ­e series such The Queen’s Gambit? Or would they prefer to tune into cheap- to- make, sometimes half-witted panel shows?

Yes, the budgets of the new digital rivals might be colossal, but is this an excuse for giving up? Ealing

It is irreverent humour that brings us together as a nation

The licence fee is a financial buffer that too often results in lazy television

Studios ran on a shoestring compared to the might of Warner Brothers, yet they still produced some of the funniest films ever made.

Surely it is time for the BBC and ITV to wake up. I said it in 1997 and I repeat it in 2020, we should say goodbye to the compulsory licence fee, a financial buffer that all too often results in unimaginat­ive and lazy television.

The BBC should banish its crippling culture of fear. I saw this at first hand recently when, after hours of painful meetings, executives felt unable to go ahead with a new Birds Of A Feather. They were simply afraid to take the risk of booking a whole series. ITV were delighted when we offered it them instead, and it attracted 12 million viewers for the first episode.

I will think twice before tuning in during our Christmas of restrictio­ns. It’s not that I don’t respect the BBC. On the contrary, I’ve had a lifelong love affair with the Corporatio­n and worked for it for more than three decades, but it all too often fails to show up for the date these days. I am absolutely certain the BBC still has a future, but it must stop worshippin­g at the altar of youth and combat the woke warriors who probably don’t even watch TV.

The BBC must recognise that millions of viewers are still willing it to succeed, me especially. So please be brave enough to cause occasional offence and shrug off the criticism that might follow. I wouldn’t care what’s said on Twitter. And neither would the licence-fee payers I know – I can tell you that.

Above all else, the BBC must dare to be genuinely, warm-heartedly, provocativ­ely funny and being funny means causing offence. Funny is what brings us together, and never more so than this abnormal year.

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 ??  ?? GAG REFLEX: Nish Kumar, who lays into Right-leaning politician­s
GAG REFLEX: Nish Kumar, who lays into Right-leaning politician­s
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