Jobs & Education0 min ago
Jonathan Ross Chat Show
Last night, someone called Marion Ghost...... was a guest on Jonathan Ross Chat Show and I am appalled that he talked of killing a dog and made jokes about dying people and chemo therapy. I am so angry! Does anyone know where in the vast BBC I can register a complaint? Even the audience were shocked at what was being discussed and this type of "chat" I strongly feel is way out of line. Do you agree?
Answers
No best answer has yet been selected by tetherend. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.And he wasn't even funny!!
I suspect the BBC are trying heavily to promote him as the latest thing as his show is on BBC 3 at the moment.
If you go on to the BBC website I am sure you will find a way of complaining. Personally, I am not so bothered about the content just that he was rubbish.
Holllywood stars Nicole Kidman and David Schwimmer looked really bemused. And did you notice they turned the camera on them off? I reckon they asked for it cos that third-rate 'comedian' was so crap.
Hi, i didnt see the item, so probably am not in a position to comment. However, when it comes to comedy, i dont think any subjects are out of bounds (well i can think of two, but they are not death and chemotherapy)
i think it's just peoples different tastes - i for instance cannot stand bo selecta and all that rubbish that man does - cant find it funny, and actually cringe if i had to watch any of it, whereas some of my friends think he's really funny. Vivre la differance is what i say (in very bad french)
death is the one thing that unites us all, and personally i dont see why in certain circumstance it cant be funny. I work with dying people, and there are a lot of laughs in that job
as to your original question if you go to bbc.co.uk i'm sure you will find how to complain
Well, thats all very well, but as i am the only one who actually answered your question, i would have thought that may be a valid reason for replying .... :-)
plus, mine were general comments on the appropriateness of things in comedy, which i feel may validly contribute to the general discussion. I did say i couldn't comment on the actual item, whicj is true, but does that mean i am not allowed to comment in general?
yes i have - my mother in fact and i can still live with 'poor taste' comedy.when u make jokes of that ilk there will always be someone somewhere who takes offense on a personal level.
peter kay does a routine about a funeral when a twix wrapper gets blown past and the mourners all say 'oh look! he loved twix - its a sign !' to which peter kay says 'no its not its litter!'
ive been to a funeral where something very similar happened and found that routine highly amusing as a result but someone else at that same funeral would take offense!
Dennis Leary used to tell jokes about people with cancer etc, but the only people who found it offensive were the people who knew or were related to someone who had cancer. The people who actually DID have cancer thought he was hilarious. I saw a programme where he said he used to get letters from peole with cancer who would ask him to include jokes about testicular cancer etc.
BTW, to those who are lodging complaints, I understand why you feel the need to do so, but remember that this is a new, up-and-coming "comedy" act out for as much attention as he can get. Bearing in mind the adage about there being no such thing as bad publicity, wouldn't it hit him harder to ignore him? Now you know what he's like, simply don't watch anything he's on.
I am a fan of High Spirits but totally understand how many people were offended. The reference to terminally ill people passing on messages to the 'other side' when they pass away is actually based on an American guy who is offering this service in the States...he was on the Jeremy Vine show on Radio 2 a few weeks ago, again many people phoned in and were disgusted, especially as there was a charge for this 'service'.