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Emily Maitlis shocks BBC director-general with haunted-pussy taunt

Posted by Axegrinder on 31 October 2008 at 00:35
Tags: Emily Maitlis, Jonathan Ross, Mark Thompson, Mock the Week, Newsnight, Russell Brand

Thursday night’s edition of Newsnight is sure to go down as an all-time classic, thanks to the wonderful presenter Emily Maitlis telling BBC director-general Mark Thompson: “I’m now so old my pussy is haunted.”

Just in case the DG was too shocked to take it in fully, Maitlis helpfully repeated the line.

For those who missed Newsnight, it should be pointed out that Maitlis was quoting comic Frankie Boyle, a panellist from Wednesday night’s Mock The Week programme, who suggested the line as one of the “things the Queen would never say during her Christmas speech”.

Maitlis was pressing Thompson to give an opinion – in the wake of the Russell Brand/Jonathan Ross affair – if it was acceptable for the BBC to broadcast a comedian putting the words “I’m now so old my pussy is haunted” into the mouth of the sovereign.

Axegrinder suspects Maitlis’s remarkable performance will soon be a huge hit on YouTube.

But until then, we recommend you enjoy the interview on BBC iPlayer or via the link on the Newsnight web page.

Maitlis’s interview with Thompson begins 10 minutes into the programme. She delivers her killer question after 17 minutes and 5 seconds.

To see Frankie Boyle utter the “haunted pussy” gag, skip to 27 minutes and 58 seconds of Mock the Week.

9am update: here it is on Youtube:

 


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Ross and Brand prank call not too disgusting for Daily Mail website

Posted by Axegrinder on 29 October 2008 at 09:46
Tags: Daily Mail, Jonathan Ross, Russell Brand, dailymail.co.uk

“Incredibly, the BBC judged the pre-recorded stunt fit to be broadcast on radio,” gasped a Daily Mail leader column on Tuesday about the Russell Brand/Jonathan Ross affair.

“Do they care nothing… about the sensibilities of ordinary listeners and licence-fee-payers?” added the editorial.

And in an op-ed piece, Sir Gerald Kaufman condemned the BBC for allowing transmission of the “deeply unpleasant” item.

Meanwhile, a certain newspaper decided that it was not so unpleasant that it couldn’t be played on its website, by means of a YouTube video of the offending phone calls to Andrew Sachs, plus a transcript.

Which newspaper website apparently cared “nothing… about the sensibilities of ordinary listeners” and rebroadcast the “disgusting” and “outrageously offensive” item?

Why dailymail.co.uk, of course.

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