Monday, January 22, 2007

British media welcome TV eviction after racism row

LONDON - Britain's media on Saturday welcomed the eviction of a reality TV show contestant accused of racism and bullying, but criticized the television channel over a show that has whipped up an international storm.

"Celebrity Big Brother" has dominated headlines in Britain and India this week after former dental nurse Jade Goody and other contestants ganged up on Bollywood star Shilpa Shetty, calling her "the Indian" and "Poppadom" and saying "She should fuck off home."

Britain's media watchdog received around 40,000 complaints from viewers, top politicians weighed into the row and a major sponsor of the program withdrew its backing.

Internet chat rooms have been abuzz with debate about whether what was said on the show constituted racism, and to what extent Goody and her allies reflected prejudices in society at large. Many people felt the story was exaggerated by the media.

The show's producers said 82 percent of voters had chosen Londoner Goody for eviction over the other nominee, Shetty, in what may be seen as a stand against racial intolerance.

A contrite Goody, 25, denied she was a racist or a bully in her post-eviction interview late on Friday, when the extent of the controversy was revealed to her for the first time.

Contestants are sealed off from the outside world in a house where cameras follow their every move 24 hours a day.

"I can't dignify myself because that video footage of myself is nasty," she said. "I'm not going to sit here and try and justify myself. Yes, I said those things and they were nasty.

"I am not a racist and I sincerely ... apologize to anybody I've offended out there."

Goody rose to fame after taking part in a non-celebrity version of "Big Brother" in 2002, and suggested even before leaving the house that she would pay a price for her behavior.

"It was the beginning of my career and it's the end of my career," she said.

Channel 4 under fire

Mass-circulation newspapers aimed their headlines at Goody, with the Sun declaring "Goody Riddance" and the Mirror saying "A Bigot and a Fake."

But they also had harsh words for Channel 4, which airs the show, and the production company Endemol, saying Goody's exit appeared to have been stage managed.

They also criticized the decision to ban the crowds that traditionally greet evictees outside the Big Brother house, and to cancel a press conference.

Channel 4, which saw viewing figures jump by over 2 million after the furor erupted, had been under pressure to act.

A poll conducted for the Guardian newspaper suggested that most people thought the channel should have intervened to protect Shetty. Some 55 percent believed the insults directed at the 31-year-old Indian film star were not typical of modern Britain.

But Trevor Phillips, head of the Commission for Equality and Human Rights, saw the show as evidence of a wider problem.

"This program has laid bare the dark heart of private prejudice that all too often sits behind the public veneer of tolerance," he said this week.

Commentators reflected on a week in which events on a reality television contest dominated the news and triggered a serious debate about racism and bullying.

"BB (Big Brother) satisfies our taste for cruelty," wrote David Aaronovitch in a commentary in the Times. "But what is so odd is that to discuss real things we have to make them unreal first, and then describe them as reality." Reuters

Thursday, January 18, 2007

'Idol' storms US ratings, disappoints some fans

LOS ANGELES - "American Idol" took US television by storm with a record 37.3 million viewers tuning in for the sixth season premiere, ratings showed on Wednesday, but the show's tone-deaf wannabe singers struck a sour note for some fans.

The two-hour debut on Fox TV on Tuesday, featuring an "urban Amish" singer and a woman who growl-sung like the lion in "The Wizard of Oz," received the highest audience numbers in the show's history, according to Nielsen Media Research.

The 37.3 million total audience was a 5 percent increase over last year's opening show of the fifth season.

Despite the monster ratings for the top-rated show in America, some fans and critics were largely disappointed with the mix of good and hopeless auditions held in Minneapolis and the judges who send the best to the next round in Hollywood.

"I think that we need to see more of the good with the bad. Not only did we get bad, but it seemed to be longer segments of individuals .... I'm not going to waste my time tonight," said one fan on the Americanidol.com Web site message board.

On the Yahoo Web message boards, one fan said the bad singers were just too much to take. "Too much of a bad thing is not so entertaining. Let's see more of the ones that were almost good enough or that blow us away. The bad ones are just mostly ridiculous, by this point."

Critic Linda Stasi of the New York Post wrote, "Why not take us to the real dawg pound and watch the dogs get ready for euthanasia."

"American Idol," a spin-off of a British hit that was a surprise US success in 2002, dominated US television ratings in 2006.

The show and its viewer-driven format has produced a number of bona-fide stars including Kelly Clarkson, country singer Carrie Underwood and Jennifer Hudson, who this week won a Golden Globe for her performance in the musical movie "Dreamgirls."

This year's winner will be chosen by the viewing public in May. Reuters

India Bans AXN for 'Indecent Content'

NEW DELHI (AFP) - India has banned Sony's satellite channel AXN for two months for showing "indecent content," according to the Information and Broadcasting Ministry.


It was the first time India has banned a mainstream channel.

"It has been decided to prohibit transmission or re-transmission of the channel up to March 15, with immediate effect," Information Minister PR Dasmunsi told reporters late Wednesday after a cabinet meeting in New Delhi.

AXN, run by Sony Entertainment Company and uplinked from Hong Kong, has been banned for airing the programme "World's Sexiest Advertisements," Dasmunsi said.

The programme is "against good taste or decency and is likely to adversely affect public morality," he said.

The minister said the ban on AXN was being implemented under the provisions of 1995 regulations and would be applied across all content delivery platforms -- cable, direct to home and conditional access systems.

Sony Entertainment Television India CEO Kunal Dasgupta called the ban "unfair".

"When the order is served on us we will comply and take the channel off the air," he told the Hindustan Times.

But Sony had already removed the "objectionable content" and not been given a hearing, Dasgupta noted.

India has, in the past, banned or placed restrictions on the broadcast of sexually explicit content that the government says will corrupt traditional Indian values, but it has not previously banned a whole channel.

However, newspapers noted that AXN aired the show only after 11:00 pm in line with a proposed new broadcasting bill.

The Times of India described the content as "creative ads with sexual imagery and overtones although rarely exposing too much skin."

India's previous Hindu nationalist government had threatened to ban the French satellite channel Fashion TV but later worked out an understanding with the broadcasters.

Wednesday, January 17, 2007

Two 'Old' Friends Reunite On New TV Show

LOS ANGELES - Two old television "Friends" will soon reunite on the small screen -- this time playing rival magazine editors rather than coffee-drinking pals.

Jennifer Aniston has agreed to guest star on an upcoming episode of Courteney Cox's new TV drama "Dirt," marking the first time the two will have worked together since their former NBC comedy hit, "Friends," left the airwaves in May 2004.

Production on Aniston's guest appearance, the season finale of "Dirt" set to air on March 27, will begin later this week, FX spokesman Jon Solberg said on Tuesday.

Cox stars on "Dirt" as hard-charging, scandal-obsessed tabloid editor-in-chief Lucy Spiller, a character far removed from her role as the sensible neat freak Monica Geller on "Friends."

Aniston, best known for her Emmy-winning "Friends" role as lovelorn Rachel Green, will appear on "Dirt" as Tina Harrod, a rival magazine editor who has a history with Spiller, Solberg said.

The show's first two episodes have averaged 3 million viewers, about the same as two other signature FX series, "The Shield" and "Rescue Me."

Aniston has at this point committed to just the one episode of "Dirt," but Solberg said it was possible her part would be written in such a way as to allow her to return to the show in later seasons.

Two other former members of the "Friends" cast launched short-lived comedy series of their own after "Friends" ended its 10-year NBC run Matt LeBlanc with his spin-off "Joey" and Lisa Kudrow with HBO's "The Comeback." But both of those shows fizzled due to low ratings.

Another "Friends" veteran, Matthew Perry, currently co-stars on NBC's show-within-a-show drama "Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip." Reuters
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