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BBC Rules Airing BAFTAs’ N-Word Outburst by Tourette’s Activist Was an Editorial Breach

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BBC Rules Airing BAFTAs’ N-Word Outburst by Tourette’s Activist Was an Editorial Breach

By Kory Grow

Kory Grow

Contact Kory Grow on X View all posts by Kory Grow April 8, 2026 LONDON, ENGLAND - FEBRUARY 22: Michael B. Jordan and Delroy Lindo present the Special Visual Effects Award on stage during the EE BAFTA Film Awards 2026 at The Royal Festival Hall on February 22, 2026 in London, England. (Photo by Stuart Wilson/BAFTA/Getty Images for BAFTA) Michael B. Jordan and Delroy Lindo at the BAFTA Film Awards 2026 Stuart Wilson/BAFTA/Getty Images for BAFTA

The BBC‘s executive complaints unit (ECU) has ruled that failing to censor the N-word during the BAFTAs broadcast in February was indeed a breach of editorial standards, according to Variety.

During Sinners actors Michael B. Jordan and Delroy Lindo’s presentation of the evening’s first award, John Davidson, a white Scottish activist whose goal is to raise awareness for Tourette syndrome and whose life story was the subject of the BAFTA-nominated I Swear, was heard shouting the slur. The BBC apologized for the gaffe, but questions have lingered about why the network didn’t censor the word when it was working with a two-hour delay and censored phrases like “Free Palestine.”

Kate Phillips, the BBC’s chief content officer, is now saying that the ECU “found this should not have made it to air and it was a clear breach of our editorial standards,” with the additional caveat that the ECU “found the breach was not intentional.” Furthermore, Phillips called airing the word “highly offensive” and that it “had no editorial justification.” Phillips also said the network’s failure to edit out the word until Monday in the version of the broadcast streamable on the BBC’s iPlayer was a “serious mistake.”

So just how did the word make it to the air? Phillips says the producers “did not hear the N-word at the time it was said and therefore no decision was taken to leave the word within the broadcast.” The ECU now sees this as a “genuine mistake, especially as the team did correctly identify and edit out a subsequent use of the same word, in line with the protocols that were agreed in advance of the event regarding offensive and unacceptable language.”

During the broadcast, the awards show’s host, Alan Cumming, addressed the outburst. “The tics you’ve heard tonight are involuntary, which means the person who has Tourette’s syndrome has no control over their language,” he said. We apologize if you are offended.” Despite this, actors including Jamie Foxx and Wendell Pierce rebuked Davidson for the language.

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