Soldato
		
		- Joined
 - 29 Sep 2003
 
- Posts
 - 5,841
 
- Location
 - Newcastle upon Tyne
 
I see a lot of people claim that the BBC is biased (mostly to the left). 
Watching the Graham Norton show there was a joke at the beginning of the show first showing Jeremy Corbyn (with the comment ‘wishing there was a bigger party’) followed by Boris Johnson and a comment about lying.
Would this indicate bias in any particular way to you?
My point was that it was a joke at the expense of both parties and therefore showed no bias either way. Another persons point was that calling someone a liar was more slanderous than a simple comment about wishing for a bigger party. My retort was that this persons own bias (to the right) was what made them think the joke was biased.
If I am trying to decide whether something is biased one way or another I always try and start from the middle ground. It seems a lot of people don’t even attempt to start from this point and simply declare anything they don’t agree with as biased without a critical assessment of the situation, context or content.
Thoughts?
M.
	
		
			
		
		
	
				
			Watching the Graham Norton show there was a joke at the beginning of the show first showing Jeremy Corbyn (with the comment ‘wishing there was a bigger party’) followed by Boris Johnson and a comment about lying.
Would this indicate bias in any particular way to you?
My point was that it was a joke at the expense of both parties and therefore showed no bias either way. Another persons point was that calling someone a liar was more slanderous than a simple comment about wishing for a bigger party. My retort was that this persons own bias (to the right) was what made them think the joke was biased.
If I am trying to decide whether something is biased one way or another I always try and start from the middle ground. It seems a lot of people don’t even attempt to start from this point and simply declare anything they don’t agree with as biased without a critical assessment of the situation, context or content.
Thoughts?
M.
	
 