Frankie Boyle's Katie Price joke censored (1 Viewer)

Coventry La La La

New Member
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Katie Price said Frankie Boyle's joke about her disabled son Harvey was "vile"

Media regulator Ofcom has censured comedian Frankie Boyle and Channel 4 for broadcasting "offensive" jokes about Katie Price and her son Harvey.
Ofcom upheld 500 complaints about Boyle's routine, broadcast in December.
It appeared to "target and mock the mental and physical disabilities" of the eight year-old, Ofcom said.

Channel 4 said it was "wholly justified in the context". Price said it was "a further insult" that Ofcom had not forced the station to apologise.

The model was among those who complained about the comments in Boyle's comedy series Tramadol Nights, saying they were "discriminatory, offensive, demeaning and humiliating".

In response Channel 4 said Boyle's comedy was not "intended as a slur on any particular community", but that "everyone is fair game in Frankie's eyes".

One of the jokes that attracted complaints was not about Harvey's disability or about rape or incest, it said, but was "simply absurdist satire".

The broadcaster also said Boyle's remarks were meant to make fun of Price's alleged "exploitation of her children for publicity purposes... her behaviour as a mother and her cavalier attitude towards relationships".

Channel 4 chief executive David Abraham personally sanctioned the jokes before they were broadcast.

But the regulator ruled that allowing the jokes to be screened was "an erroneous decision on a matter of editorial judgement on the broadcaster's part".

Ofcom accepted that Price and ex-husbands Alex Reid and Peter Andre had "consciously exposed their and their children's lives to the media" and must expect to be the targets of humour and criticism.

But it continued: "The fact that a public figure chooses to expose some aspects of his or her child's life in the media does not provide broadcasters with unlimited licence to broadcast comedy that targets humour at such a child's expense."

The ruling also said: "Ofcom was of the view that the material in question appeared to directly target and mock the mental and physical disabilities of a known eight year-old child who had not himself chosen to be in the public eye.

"As such, Ofcom found that the comments had considerable potential to be highly offensive to the audience."
Ofcom said the second episode of Boyle's comedy series, aired on 7 December, broke two rules in its broadcasting code.

A Channel 4 statement said it "acknowledges" Ofcom's findings. A spokesperson pointed out Ofcom did not fine the channel or force it to issue an on-air apology.
Price responded by saying that she was pleased that Ofcom had ruled against Channel 4 but was "amazed" the regulator did not require an apology to be broadcast.

"This strikes me as a further insult to my wonderful son and another in a series of failures in this sordid affair," she said.

Channel 4's role as the official broadcaster for the 2012 Paralympics should now be questioned, she added.
"Would they have taken this route if Harvey was the child of a well-known politician?" she continued.

"It is clear that people at the highest levels in Channel 4 made a major misjudgement and that they are not capable of seeing how wrong their behaviour was."
Ofcom cleared a further episode of Frankie Boyle's Tramadol Nights, in which he made a joke about people with mental health problems.

Meanwhile, Ofcom also cleared BBC Two's Top Gear after the hosts made fun of Mexican people for being "lazy".
The regulator said viewers would have been familiar with the show's "mocking, playground-style humour".

"To restrict humour only to material which does not cause offence would be an unnecessary restriction of freedom of expression," it added.
 

gouldberg

New Member
Nice to see people can still understand jokes as just being jokes....oh wait.

I think it's clear to see that yes, what Frankie said was outrageous, but if you've ever seen Frankie perform before you know that's exactly what you're going to get! Comedians are paid to say jokes, definition of a joke is: "a humorous anecdote or remark intended to provoke laughter". People in the audience laughed when he told the joke, therefore under the definition of the word it was fair game.

People seem to take things too seriously nowadays.

Frankie Boyle's words....offensive, YES......factual, NO.
 

rob9872

Well-Known Member
Katie Price, sorry no lets not give her the dignity of a real name. Jordan is a scutty tramp.

I totally agree but that's not Harvey's fault and the joke aimed about him is ott (and I'm pretty sick tbh) this was for down the pub material and not for broadcasting.

Jokes are good, even jokes about disabilities are good and even the line for me isn't at kids with disabilities, but when you name the kid and make it personally about him just becuase his mums a slapper I think the line has been crossed.
 

Nick

Administrator
Does somebody at the channel not watch it before it is aired to see whether it is fit to be aired or not?

Personally I don't mind it (Can tell I read sickipedia) but obviously people get offended at all sorts.
 

rob9872

Well-Known Member
I read sickipedia too and I laugh at the jokes. I even laughed at the joke that this was about when it was broadcast because it is exactly my sense of humour (I know I'm a bad person) but I still don't think it should have been aired. Mind you I thought the Jade Goody stuff (and I didn't like her either) was even more offensive :)
 

rob9872

Well-Known Member
And to answer the question yes they would have watched it and must have known it would get complaints but the channel, the timing and the warnings before each they probably thought were suffice. Many that complained woudl probably not have seen teh original but when the media highlight it, I'm sure these people then look for it almost as if they want to be offended so that they can get their soap-box out and have a good old whinge
 

Il Pirata

Well-Known Member
Who watches Frankie Boyle and then complains about being offended? :facepalm:

If it offends you don't watch the f***ing show, it's his job to offend. It's like watching Delia Smith and then being pissed off if she makes an apple pie.
 
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