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BBC fined £400,000 over phone-ins | BBC fined £400,000 over phone-ins |
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The BBC has been fined £400,000 by media watchdog Ofcom for misleading its audiences by "faking" phone-ins. | The BBC has been fined £400,000 by media watchdog Ofcom for misleading its audiences by "faking" phone-ins. |
The Comic Relief, Children in Need and Sport Relief TV shows were caught up in the scandal, along with Liz Kershaw on 6 Music and Jo Whiley's Radio 1 show. | |
The regulator's £400,000 penalty is a record for the corporation. | |
"The BBC deceived its audience by faking winners of competitions and deliberately conducting competitions unfairly," Ofcom said. | |
Viewers were urged to call some BBC programmes after contestants had already been chosen. | Viewers were urged to call some BBC programmes after contestants had already been chosen. |
Other shows had been pre-recorded, so nobody could win apparently "live" competitions. | Other shows had been pre-recorded, so nobody could win apparently "live" competitions. |
The affected shows were fined individually, totalling £400,000. They were: | The affected shows were fined individually, totalling £400,000. They were: |
• Comic Relief (BBC One, March 2007) - £45,000 | • Comic Relief (BBC One, March 2007) - £45,000 |
• Sport Relief (BBC One, July 2006) - £45,000 | • Sport Relief (BBC One, July 2006) - £45,000 |
• Children in Need (BBC One Scotland, November 2005) - £35,000 | • Children in Need (BBC One Scotland, November 2005) - £35,000 |
• TMi (BBC Two and CBBC, September 2006) - £50,000 | • TMi (BBC Two and CBBC, September 2006) - £50,000 |
• Liz Kershaw Show (BBC 6 Music, May 2005 to January 2006) - £115,000 | • Liz Kershaw Show (BBC 6 Music, May 2005 to January 2006) - £115,000 |
• Jo Whiley Show (BBC Radio 1, 20 April to 12 May 2006) - £75,000 | • Jo Whiley Show (BBC Radio 1, 20 April to 12 May 2006) - £75,000 |
• Russell Brand (BBC 6 Music, April 2006) - £17,500 | • Russell Brand (BBC 6 Music, April 2006) - £17,500 |
• Clare McDonnell Show (BBC 6 Music, from September 2006) - £17,500 | • Clare McDonnell Show (BBC 6 Music, from September 2006) - £17,500 |
In a statement the BBC said it accepted the findings. | |
A member of staff won a competition on Russell Brand's BBC 6 Music show"Ofcom has recognised that neither the BBC nor any member of staff made any money from these serious editorial lapses. | |
"Whilst we must never be complacent and must remain constantly vigilant, audience research suggests the comprehensive action we have taken is rebuilding the trust of viewers and listeners." | |
The BBC said the issues had been taken "extremely seriously" all along, with apologies made and "an unprecedented action plan" to deal with the matters raised. | |
These plans included training for more than 19,000 staff, new guidance to programme makers on the running of competitions and a stricter code of conduct, it added. | |
Suspended | |
In July 2007, Ofcom fined the BBC £50,000 after children's programme Blue Peter falsified the results of a contest during a live show. | In July 2007, Ofcom fined the BBC £50,000 after children's programme Blue Peter falsified the results of a contest during a live show. |
The BBC later suspended all competitions after an inquiry unearthed a fresh batch of faked phone-ins the same month. | The BBC later suspended all competitions after an inquiry unearthed a fresh batch of faked phone-ins the same month. |
BBC One's Sport Relief show in July 2006, Comic Relief in March 2007, Children in Need on BBC Scotland in November 2005, the Liz Kershaw Show on BBC 6 Music and CBBC programme TMi were all found to have breached editorial standards. | |
Jo Whiley's Radio 1 show was accused of misleading listenersAs a result, the corporation unveiled a code of conduct for its competitions on TV, radio and online services in November. | Jo Whiley's Radio 1 show was accused of misleading listenersAs a result, the corporation unveiled a code of conduct for its competitions on TV, radio and online services in November. |
Then in January this year, shows hosted by Russell Brand and Jo Whiley were at the centre of two new cases of misleading the public in radio competitions. | Then in January this year, shows hosted by Russell Brand and Jo Whiley were at the centre of two new cases of misleading the public in radio competitions. |
Callers were invited to participate in "live" competitions on pre-recorded episodes of the 6 Music and Radio 1 shows which were broadcast in 2006. | Callers were invited to participate in "live" competitions on pre-recorded episodes of the 6 Music and Radio 1 shows which were broadcast in 2006. |
The penalty comes after ITV was fined a record £5.68m by Ofcom for abusing premium rate phone services in viewer competitions in May. | The penalty comes after ITV was fined a record £5.68m by Ofcom for abusing premium rate phone services in viewer competitions in May. |
TV shows Ant and Dec's Saturday Night Takeaway, Gameshow Marathon and Soapstar Superstar were all found to have "serious editorial issues". | TV shows Ant and Dec's Saturday Night Takeaway, Gameshow Marathon and Soapstar Superstar were all found to have "serious editorial issues". |