News from: headline
March 13, 2008
Complaint over RTÉ straitjacket sketch upheld by monitor
Complaint over RTÉ straitjacket sketch upheld by monitor
AN RTÉ Two comedy sketch show which featured a man in a straitjacket trying to hail a taxi outside the Central Mental Hospital in Dundrum stigmatised and stereotyped people with mental illnesses, the Broadcasting Complaints Commission (BCC) has ruled.
Headline, the national media monitoring organisation for mental health, complained to the BCC that the programme, I Dare Ya, was insulting to those with mental health problems and perpetuated negative and uninformed stereotypes.
I Dare Ya is a Candid Camera-style show in the genre of US series such as Jackass and Punk*d, according to RTÉ. In the programme, one comedian dressed as a nurse calls a taxi for another comedian dressed in a straitjacket. When the taxi arrives, the man in the straitjacket refuses to get into the taxi and hides behind a tree while the taxi driver (an unsuspecting member of the public) and the other comedian try to persuade him to get into the car.
In its defence of the show, RTÉ said it was the nature of comedy that jokes were made at the expense of everyone in society. "Comedy pokes fun at everybody, whether it is Catholic priests, bald men, fat people, Kerry people, librarians, women drivers, taxi drivers etc."
The BCC upheld the complaint and said while it accepted the programme "is classified as a comedy show", the station had not taken measures to ensure people with a disability were not stereotyped.
The BCC received two complaints in relation to this programme and upheld both. It rejected the other 21 complaints before it last February.
In one of these complaints, RTÉ had been accused of discrimination against the Traveller community by broadcasting the word "knackery" during an edition of the talent contest You're a Star.
One of the show's judges, Brendan O'Connor, told a contestant she had a "knackery accent from Wicklow" and he couldn't understand a word she was saying. RTÉ accepted the term was inappropriate but said it was used in a non-derogatory manner.
The BCC accepted Mr O'Connor had not intended to be derogatory and had used the word to "highlight his puzzlement".
The BCC also rejected a complaint made in relation to the discussion of penis enlargement on the Gerry Ryan Show on RTÉ 2FM. The complainant said the interview with a cosmetic surgeon showed no modesty or reserve and that Ryan appeared to "relish the repetition of the word penis".
The BCC said a warning had been given at the start of the broadcast.
© 2008 The Irish TimesComments
Post a comment
Archive
- September 2010 (1 articles)
- August 2010 (2 articles)
- July 2010 (1 articles)
- June 2010 (7 articles)
- May 2010 (2 articles)
- April 2010 (3 articles)
- March 2010 (2 articles)
- February 2010 (9 articles)
- January 2010 (6 articles)
- December 2009 (4 articles)
- November 2009 (1 articles)
- October 2009 (7 articles)
- September 2009 (6 articles)
- August 2009 (5 articles)
- July 2009 (10 articles)
- June 2009 (6 articles)
- May 2009 (13 articles)
- April 2009 (13 articles)
- March 2009 (8 articles)
- February 2009 (13 articles)
- January 2009 (11 articles)
- December 2008 (5 articles)
- November 2008 (8 articles)
- October 2008 (6 articles)
- September 2008 (5 articles)
- August 2008 (5 articles)
- July 2008 (5 articles)
- June 2008 (2 articles)
- May 2008 (5 articles)
- April 2008 (3 articles)
- March 2008 (6 articles)
- February 2008 (4 articles)
- January 2008 (4 articles)
- December 2007 (4 articles)
- November 2007 (7 articles)
- October 2007 (4 articles)
- September 2007 (2 articles)
- August 2007 (3 articles)
- July 2007 (6 articles)
- June 2007 (6 articles)
- May 2007 (8 articles)
- April 2007 (3 articles)


I am delighted that this was upheld there is no need to mock mental health on TV.
comment #1 by Mary , on March 14, 2008 at 11:02 a.m.: