Wednesday, April 8, 2026
Home / Entertainment / BBC upholds complaints over racial slur in Baftas ...
Entertainment

BBC upholds complaints over racial slur in Baftas broadcast

CN
CitrixNews Staff
·
BBC upholds complaints over racial slur in Baftas broadcast
BBC upholds complaints over racial slur in Baftas broadcast20 minutes agoShareSaveAdd as preferred on GooglePaul GlynnCulture reporterGetty Images A Bafta maskGetty Images

The broadcast of a racial slur that was shouted during the Bafta Film Awards breached the BBC's editorial standards, the corporation's executive complaints unit (ECU) has ruled.

A Tourette's campaigner shouted an involuntary racial slur while actors Michael B Jordan and Delroy Lindo were presenting one of the categories at the event in February.

The shout was not edited out of the subsequent TV broadcast, which aired on BBC One on a two-hour delay, and the ceremony remained available to stream on iPlayer until the morning after.

On Wednesday, the BBC's chief content officer Kate Phillips said the ECU "found this should not have made it to air and it was a clear breach of our editorial standards". However, she noted, it also "found the breach was not intentional".

The ECU received "a large number of complaints" about the BBC's Baftas coverage, and upheld those relating to editorial standards on harm and offence.

Last month, outgoing director general Tim Davie said the BBC "profoundly regrets" what happened, adding that the team editing the ceremony had not heard the word and did not intentionally leave it in.

Serious mistake

The ECU's findings said: "The ECU found that the inclusion of the n-word in the broadcast (which was also streamed live on iPlayer) was highly offensive, had no editorial justification and represented a breach of the BBC's editorial standards, but that the breach was unintentional."

Phillips explained that "the production team 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".

She added: "The ECU accepted this was 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."

The ECU said leaving the coverage on iPlayer until the Monday morning was also a "serious mistake" and breached guidelines.

"The fact that the unedited recording remained available for so long aggravated the offence caused by the inadvertent inclusion of the n-word in the broadcast," its report said.

Phillips said: "There was a lack of clarity among the team present at the event as to whether the word was audible on the recording. This resulted in there being a delay before the decision was taken to remove the recording from iPlayer.

"The ECU has been clear that this was a serious mistake and commented that the fact the unedited version stayed up overnight made the severe impact of the inadvertent inclusion of the n-word worse."

Phillips said the BBC "must learn from our mistakes and ensure our processes are as robust as they can be", and set out measures to improve pre-event planning, production at live events, and the iPlayer takedown processes.

The Baftas coverage caused a major outcry at the time.

Culture secretary Lisa Nandy called the broadcast "completely unacceptable and harmful", while Conservative Party leader Kemi Badenoch said the BBC had made "a horrible mistake".

Tourette's campaigner John Davidson said the BBC should have "worked harder to prevent anything that I said" from being aired, and questioned why he had been seated near a microphone.

Bafta ceremony host Alan Cumming apologised after the "trauma-triggering" show.

BBC says broadcast of racial slur at Baftas was 'genuine mistake'

Bafta host Alan Cumming apologises after 'trauma-triggering' show

BBC sorry for airing racial slur shouted by guest with Tourette's at Baftas

TelevisionBafta AwardsBBC

Originally reported by BBC News