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Iris and the F Word

Mark Devenport | 15:04 UK time, Monday, 20 August 2007

It's taken a bit of time for the transcripts of some of the Stormont committee sessions to appear on the Assembly website but in the case of the Health Committee's trip to Magee College at the end of June it's been worth the wait.

MLAs were cross questioning Health Department officials on their draft Sexual Violence strategy when the chair, Iris Robinson, espoused some forthright views on the need for the media to "curtail material that feeds minds that may commit sexual or copycat crimes".

The Strangford MP went on to accuse TV bosses of broadcasting "the most violent filth that you could ever wish to see before the watershed...With the greatest respect to anybody who is a fan, programmes such as 鈥楨mmerdale, 鈥 Coronation Street鈥, and 鈥楨astEnders鈥 try to outdo one another in graphic storylines. They portray bed-hopping and sexual promiscuity to which children are exposed because they are broadcast before the watershed. Such programmes are good at highlighting certain themes and illnesses such as AIDS, but they do not deal with the main issue; they are saying, 鈥淪uch behaviour is normal鈥. We do not hear about prevention or about having a lifelong love partner."

Without naming Gordon Ramsay, she went on to lambast "a chef whose every other word is the F word". She finished by declaring "I do not care if I am called a 鈥淢ary Whitehouse鈥; indeed, I wish there were more such people, and it is sad that she passed away."

I think someone should tell mediawatch, the successor body to the National Viewers and Listeners Association, that six years after the passing of their founder, Mrs Whitehouse, a new scourge of the media has rallied to her cause.



颁辞尘尘别苍迟蝉听听 Post your comment

  • 1.
  • At 09:01 PM on 21 Aug 2007,
  • Colin McAuley wrote:

It occurs to me that politicians are the same everywhere. I live in Ontario, Canada, and politicians here also take aim at the "state of the media" whenever they have nothing much else to say! It is so facile to "blame someone else" for society's failings, rather than take responsibility and promote positive changes.

  • 2.
  • At 09:19 AM on 22 Aug 2007,
  • Frank Moore wrote:

Mark

OOOH 大象传媒, TITTER YE NOT!

大象传媒 bosses should start praying if Iris (aka Cruella de Ville) decides to tackle the issue of filth on television. They found Mary Whitehouse a doughty opponent but they won鈥檛 know what has hit them when Iris takes up the cudgels on behalf of the moral majority. The Iris Robinson Experience will scar them for life.


Frank
Carryduff

  • 3.
  • At 10:58 PM on 26 Aug 2007,
  • Councillor David Barbour wrote:

The argument is mostly around if 大象传媒 reflects the real world or do they influence peoples thinking. I think they do both and although I am not a fan of Iris Robinson I think she is right about 大象传媒 pumping out a challenge to traditional sexual morality (roots in christian-judaeo teaching) and allow insensitive social language that can be described as basically crude market place that parents would not take their children and young people to specially hear. Media dons must realise the priviledge they have to take their programmes right into the privacy of peoples homes. In that respect they must ensure that people pay to turn their sets on and not off. 大象传媒 take the line that they cannot be seen converting people through a climax of conscience decision based on moral reflections similar to evangelical preachers but they are feeding peoples minds through the most powerful form of media available. They cannot deny their influence and reject it at the same time when it suits.

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