carl_feedthegoat wrote:Beefymcfc wrote:PeterParker wrote:Beefymcfc wrote:PeterParker wrote:What’s BBC got to do with this? I think UEFA is providing the coverage, not them. They zoomed on him, showed his wife, etc.
I didn’t like what I saw either, but here happened the opposite, after they took him off the stadium the station that has the rights showed one of their tv shows, own production, instead of offering info about what happened, if he is alive, etc.
What I am outraged by is that they restarted the game. No one wanted that, it was all bollox. It shows players are dispensable, they do not give a flying fuck. Same as last year when they forced the clubs to end UCL and Europa League in Portugal instead of stopping it.
End it 0-0 and let the teams recover mentally.
UEFA hit a new low for me.
Are you saying that the BBC don’t have control of their own programmes, can’t cut away to something less horrific?
I am saying I don’t think they control the broadcast of this competition, they can cut it, yes, but what we see comes from UEFA, not BBC. UEFA zoomed on his wife, not BBC.
That’s what I’m saying, mate. The BBC had the opportunity to cut to anything but that and chose not to.
Extremely inappropriate for the majority of the audience watching.
Any hard facts to support your theory on 'majority' ?
In my opinion , just an opinion mind , incidents like this need to be shown to everyone as this might just sway a certain % of the viewers to embrace life a tad more than we currently do ,instead of reading about it in a book or news outlet.
To see is to feel the reality of life and how life can be taken away at any moments notice.
Not the same impact when you read about something as opposed to watching something.
Hard facts, why would I need them. Every single person I’ve spoken to has said that the pictures should not have been shown although I did ask them why they watched, to which some said they turned it off, like me, and others watched out of a sense of morbid curiosity. One said that his lad was traumatised as he was old enough to understand what was going on and it’s understandable why the BBC had to make a public apology.
If people want to watch that type of situation then I have no problems at all. I, like others, have seen enough of it in real life and that’s what we sign up for and have to expect but when it is thrust upon groups who are there to be entertained, on a station that is well known for showing these incidents up close, then that’s a different matter.