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UK

Gay People ‘Almost Invisible’ on BBC Flagship Channels

 

 

Analysis is based on very narrow time-slot, says BBC

 



 


LONDON, February 28, 2006  –  Gay people are almost invisible on the BBC’s flagship channels, according to new research commissioned by Stonewall.  Yet gay people contribute £190 million a year to the BBC in TV licence fees.

A major monitoring exercise carried out for Stonewall of 168 hours of prime-time BBC One and BBC Two found lesbian and gay lives realistically portrayed for just six minutes, or 0.06 per cent of airtime.  A further 32 minutes of programming featured derogatory or offensive references to gay people.

These came from a range of programmes including the Weakest Link, hosted by Anne Robinson, and The Lenny Henry Show.

“The stark conclusion of this major exercise is that gay licence-payers receive astonishingly poor value from the BBC,” says Stonewall chief executive Ben Summerskill.

“At a time when the BBC is seeking renewal of its Charter, it’s difficult to argue that 1.5 million households should be expected to continue making such a substantial contribution to channels on which their real lives are hardly reflected, and which are often punctuated with derisive and demeaning depictions of them.”

The report, Tuned Out – The BBC's portrayal of lesbian and gay people, carried out by Stonewall and researchers from the University of Leeds, found

■  Even when they feature on BBC One and BBC Two, gay lives are five times more likely to be portrayed negatively than positively

■  Lesbians hardly feature in BBC programming at all

■  More than 50 per cent of all references to gay people on the BBC were as jokes

■  Gay people living in stable relationships with partners and families are invisible on the BBC – most of the images used are clichés and stereotypes

■  Lesbian and gay issues are rarely tackled or even mentioned in factual programmes

■  Gay sexuality is frequently used as an insult, with almost no evidence of the BBC challenging homophobia when it arises     

Focus groups of both gay and heterosexual people told researchers they wanted to see increased and better representation of gay people on screen, and better value for money for lesbian and gay licence-fee payers.

The BBC was singled out by focus group participants as the least successful broadcaster at capturing the realities of gay lives. “If you put the BBC against Channel 4, it’s just like the caveman,” said one interviewee from London.

Gay innuendo was broadcast across a wide range of programmes in spite of BBC editorial guidelines which explicitly require staff to avoid “offensive or stereotypical assumptions”.

“The BBC has made strenuous efforts in the last five years to serve minority ethnic viewers more effectively,” says Ben Summerskill. “Gay people are forced to pay the BBC £126.50 a year on pain of imprisonment if they fail.

“We hope that the BBC will now develop for the first time a similar sense of obligation to lesbian and gay licence-payers,” he added.

The report suggests eight key recommendations to the BBC.  These include provision of urgently-needed “balanced and unsensational” coverage in its news and current affairs programmes, developing authentic gay characters throughout drama and soap outputs and including six per cent of gay contestants in game shows, reflecting the wider British population.

Commenting on the report, a BBC spokesman said:  We feel that the Stonewall Report has chosen to analyse a very narrow timeslot, 7pm - 10pm across only two BBC channels BBC One and Two which excludes nearly all of the BBC's news and current affairs output as well as all of its radio and digital output.

“We believe the researchers would have found a great deal of richness and diversity in our output across television, radio and online throughout the eight weeks they examined.

“We are committed to finding ways of reflecting the audiences daily lives in our programmes, but we feel the notion that gay men and lesbians only receive value for money from the licence fee through seeing direct representation of gay life is misconceived,” the spokesperson concluded.

■  Researchers monitored BBC One and BBC Two during eight weeks between May and July 2005 for references to lesbian and gay people and gay sexuality, capturing 168 hours of prime-time viewing between 7-10pm.

Six minutes balanced coverage of gay peoples lives in 168 hours included an interview with singer Rufus Wainwright. However, the monitored coverage included a further 30 negative or derogatory references to gay people broadcast on 22 different programmes.

LINKS

Tuned Out – The BBC's portrayal of lesbian and gay people. the full report (Adobe Acrobat reader required)
Stonewall website
 

 

 

 

Posted: 28 February 2006 at 15:00 (UK time) - Updated February 28 at 17:00

 

 

 

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