Friday 30 March 2012

Al Beeb's Nemesis Changes Address

I've long admired the Biased BBC website.  They have a truly talented team of writers, who are as humourous and erudite as they are tenacious and vigilant in comprehensively monitoring and itemising the outrageous, sometimes grotesque, and not infrequently hypocritical, leftwing bias of the feather-bedded and arrogant national broadcaster.

There's little doubt that the website gets under Al Beeb's skin, though the latter's conscience has yet to be pricked (how about releasing that Balen Report, chaps; after all, you were banging on about the need for governmental openness and accountability in your news bulletins yesterday, that is, when you weren't big-noting Robert Redford and his  leftwing worldview - at licence-payers' expense you sent Will Gompertz to NewYork to, as newsreader Joanna Gosling remarked courtesy of the autocue, "meet a man not afraid to speak his mind about America").

In the course of its magnificent work the Biased BBC website often calls attention to Al Beeb's despicable attitude to Israel, seldom if ever missing the transgressions of  Middle East editor Jeremy Bowen (pictured) and other "Beeboids," as well as its "softly, softly" approach to Islam.

 If you haven't discovered the site yet, I thoroughly recommend it.

The site is moving to a new cyber-address (I shall shortly update my blogroll accordingly) but is, I'm happy to learn, leaving its old posts intact at its former address

2 comments:

  1. Also in from the UK
    Dismay at Globe invitation to Israeli theatre
    “The Globe says it wants to "include" the Hebrew language in its festival – we have no problem with that. "Inclusiveness" is a core value of arts policy in Britain, and we support it. But by inviting Habima, the Globe is associating itself with policies of exclusion practised by the Israeli state and endorsed by its national theatre company.”
    http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2012/mar/29/dismay-globe-invitation-israeli-theatre
    Being inclusive means excluding Israelis? Note the play is the Merchant of Venice.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yes, I have my eye on that one, Ian.
      Sorry for the delay in posting your message.

      Delete

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