Friday, 14 July 2023

Huw - what a surprise!

 

 

For most of the past week our media, both print and broadcast, our politicians, and, I suspect, most of the public have obsessed (there’s no other word) over the case of the “as yet unidentified” BBC presenter and the alleged £35 000 he paid a young man for “explicit” pictures of himself.  None of those involved have come out with reputations unblemished.

The allegations, carefully crafted to suggest something illegal as well as immoral and inappropriate, first appeared in the “Sun” newspaper, which for years boosted its circulation by exhibiting (fairly) explicit pictures (upper, not lower) of teenage girls which made its “Page 3” famous. 

The ”Sun” is, of course, owned by the Rupert Murdoch News Corp empire, which also owns, among many other media outlets,   commercial television stations  such as Sky New and Fox News.  It is well known that News Corp would like to get their hands on hands on  the large slice of the British and international airwaves occupied by the publicly-owned BBC.  So any damage to  its reputation is to their advantage, and will encourage their friends in the Tory party to help then gain a chunk of the BBC’s share of the market.  (Market being,  perhaps, a key word in their lexicon).

For months Tory party spokespersons have been jumping into the media to assure us that, in a world endangered by climate change, inflation, a land war in Europe, a migrant crisis and Lord only knows what else,ex-Prime Minister Johnson’s activities around ”Partygate” are really quite a trivial matter. We should forget about them, move  on  and let the government get on with its real job of tacking these oh-so serous  threats.  

 Suddenly this urge for  a sense of proportion has been thrown out of the window and senior government spokespersons have crowded the news outlets with indignant protestations that the BBC has “serious questions to answer” and its governance, performance and funding are in need of an overhaul.  The “British People,” and not least “the Licence Payer” deserve better.

 Astonishingly, senior Labour spokespersons have joined in on the similar lines.  Have they not the sense to realise that, apart from a minority of the print press,  the BBC is the best media friend they have, despite its overcompensation in favour of climate deniers, hide-bound free-marketeers and other extremists in a search for “balance”?

I suspect it is in order to avoid accusations of partiality that the BBC has overcompensated by giving disproportionate airtime  to this issue, for fear of accusations of playing it down.

As the week progressed questions began to be raised as to what exactly was the great wrong that the still unidentified presenter had perpetrated.   A curious anomaly in British law emerged.  Whilst it is perfectly legal  to have actual sex with a “child” over the age of 16, the “age of consent,” it is not legal to have “explicit pictures” of him or her until he  or she is 18, the age of adulthood.  The “child” in the case is now 20,  so at what age were the pictures taken?  The “Sun” quickly backtracked on its insinuation that a “serious criminal act” had taken place.  The police now say that “nothing criminal” had happened. 

I have no evidence for this (I’ve been retired from teaching and daily contact with adolescents for 20 years) but from what I read in the papers I gather that young people routinely exchange “explicit pictures” of each-other as part of the development of “relationships”, as indeed do adults, and the results of their artistry often turn up in the courts as “revenge porn.”  Perhaps the law needs revising.

Now Huw Edwards has been revealed as the “prominent BBC presenter” (I am amazed: I had assumed it would be someone from Radio 1 or Radio 5 live) a whole lot  of moral and ethical questions arise: the exploitation of a “vulnerable” young person by an older and powerful person; (would it have been as “voyeuristic” had the young person been a girl?);  were slightly older men starting their careers in the BBC and hoping for advancement, also approached; to what extent  is anybody‘s legal activity outside their employment a matter for their employer;  (It is in living memory that a teacher in Batley was reprimanded by a school’s governors  for eating an ice-cream publicly whilst walking along  Commercial Street); the invasion of privacy, both of Edwards himself, who is known to have mental health problems, his family, and the young man, who is now apparently a drug addict.

The one somewhat happier turn of events is that the “serious questions to answer” are now directed at the “Sun,” rather than the BBC.

 The final puzzle to me is what on earth is it that tempts a mature and successful man, at the top of his profession (heir to Richard and then David Dimbleby in interpreting the  British State at its  seminal moments), apparently happily married with five grown-up children, and whose salary nudges half a million pounds a year, doing messing about on dating apps and other innovations better suited to the young, in order to scratch, so it seems, some sexual itch.  Clearly it seems, sex is a great leveller which can tempt us all, from the over-adventurous teenager to the sagest of adults (bishops, princes of the blood, business tycoons, stars of stage, screen and radio) into behaviour  which would have been best avoided.

My final comment concerns the language used to discuss the issue. Although the young person at the centre of it is clearly male, and there’s just one of him (so far?), both the print and broadcast media refer to him with non-gender pronouns: “their” and “them”  rather than “his” and “him.”.  I admit that the “he/she” and “his/her” construction which is necessary when the gender is in doubt is clumsy. . But why use it what the individual is clearly a man or a woman?

 I am sorry to see this  catching on because it causes  my reading or listening to “stumble”  - something which good prose should avoid.  Would it not be better to “invent” some new pronoun? 

The OUP should run a competition. I suggest “shis” and “thir” for starters.

6 comments:

  1. As well as the age of the "child", the other thing that puzzled me about the story was the complaint about the so-called failure of the BBC to follow up.
    I would have thought that an email and a phone call gave enough opportunity for a further response. I would have assumed that the complainant had changed their mind, couldn't be bothered, or that it was all made up in the first place. With 40 or so complaints a month to deal with, I certainly wouldn't have gone chasing after them, wondering what had happened.
    I'm sure that the BBC get plenty of unfounded, crackpot, trivial complaints already - I have made a couple myself.

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  2. Agreed: the BBC made two attempts to follow up the complaint from the mother an step-father and received no response. Funny the "Sun" never mentions this. Fake (or incomplete) news is alive and well.

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  3. The final puzzle to me is what on earth is it that tempts a mature and successful man, at the top of his profession (heir to Richard and then David Dimbleby in interpreting the British State at its seminal moments), apparently happily married with five grown-up children, and whose salary nudges half a million pounds a year, doing messing about on dating apps and other innovations better suited to the young, in order to scratch, so it seems, some sexual itch.

    There is a theory — which I find at least plausible — that it's not really about sex at all, but more that these guys spend so much of their lives having to be an anodyne, bland, perfect, smiley version of themselves that something in them cracks and they have to act out in some awful debauched way just because it's the opposite of the front they have to constantly put on. That is, it's not really about the sex, it's about the release from the prison of their public persona. None of which makes funding a junkie's habit in return for home-made pornographic pictures the least bit justifiable, you understand.

    One thing that's fascinating is that clearly Mr Edwards is held in much higher esteem by his colleagues than Mr Schofield. everyone who's ever worked with Mr Edwards has, from the moment his identity become public, lined up to defend him, while none of Mr Schofield's workmates, past or present, could stick the knife in fast enough. Perhaps the lesson is if you have skeletons in your closet, always make sure to be nice to people.

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  4. I agree that the theory is plausible. I'm pleased that Edwards is respec4ed by his colleagues: that says a lot. I don't know much about Schofield, but when his case was in the news I heard a high profile LGBT campaigner claim that there wouldn't have been nearly so much full has the "connection" been heterosexual. I suspect the same could be true in Edwards's case.

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  5. that there wouldn't have been nearly so much full has the "connection" been heterosexual

    Has there been any confirmation that the junkie in question is male, or is everyone just assuming it? I certainly haven’t seen any such confirmation, just speculation.

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    1. Good point. I have very carelessly fallen into this trap. I suppose we shall discover the truth eventually (when, I hope, most will have lost interest.)

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