
Series after series, it becomes more apparent that Big Brother is like Christianity; They’ve both been big in England at points, you can’t escape from either no matter where you go and it’s all down to your interpretation.
Textbook example is Emily “the-posh-student-bitch-queen-from-Bristol” Parr, who came in the house uttering the now infamous line ‘there’s this new music called indie….’ Instanty the public lambasted her, and with due logic, indie has been around for nearly 30 years. However, apart from a small number of friends and relatives we can’t be sure that Emily, say, wasn’t been a bit sarcastic or plainly just taking the piss, but, regardless, it’s now Gospel.
And, if this morning on the internet is anything to go by, she’s now either some Mr. Burnsesque racist blue blooded whore, to unfortunate victim of Big Brother Police state (that’s the actual country rather then the show). Yes, she did the very thing that can only be excused if you’re a) retarded or b) black; She used the word ‘nigger’ live on TV.
Within the space of the night, she was evicted, kicked out on her arse quicker then Michael Richards was lynched. Apparently, black people have a problem with words that connote the few hundred years we used to exploit them. This is the opinion of slap headed Guardianista Paul Flynn, who assures you that anybody under 35 won’t take offence to the word as it’s ’street’. Forgetting two main points, that a) In this context, it’s only used between certain black people who use it as a sign of empowerment rather then a racial slur and b) Emily isn’t black.
He does have a point though, essentially he hits the nail on the head when he says ‘This is undoubtedly a dumb thing for a posh, well-educated, 18 year old girl to say.’ Anybody in the Big Brother House would have to harbour the intelligence of plankton to actually launch a racial attack on another house mate. So then, if we can assume she’s not been overtly racist, does that make it all right to call somebody by a name that has offensive connotations if they use it themselves as a term of endearment? I learned this one the hard way. A girl in my sixth form used to jokingly refer to herself as a slut, though she took offence when I greeted her with ‘Yo, sperm Dumpster’. Is she a hypocrite? It’s not a black and white issue. If black people can use it and white people can’t then that’s a kind of racism in itself.
There’s three levels of blame in this problem that have already reared their head. We’ve covered Emily. If it’s the fact that she actually uttered the word that got her banned, rather then her attitude after it, claiming that it wasn’t a Big Deal. Charlie and Nikki said that they weren’t offended (Which luckily means that Asian and Black communities in Britain have already been spoken for, then) but that it was a big deal, and to be honest you couldn’t have blamed them for saying they weren’t offended as you wouldn’t want to be a part of the race argument. If she has the ‘right’ to say it, is another issue.
What is the issue, more so then any utterances of the word, is Channel 4s reaction to it. Having been accused of deliberately pretending the overtly racist stuff didn’t exist, a huge conspiracy is at their feet. Obviously, it wouldn’t take a genius to work out that if you watch the hour edited footage there’s roughly 23 hours of action you’re not seeing, and even then with BB live and on the internet it would still be fairly easy to censor any racism, it was fairly sensible for C4 to chuck her out before much more could go on.
And then you get to the third level of responsibility, Offcom. You could argue not such a big shit stir would have happened if Offcom weren’t leaning on channel 4. And if this decision is in anyway to appease or influenced by Offcom, it gives a far more sinister image then 3,600 utterances of the n word. By evicting people for offensive language whilst, let’s face it, bullying and offending people are a staple part of the Big Brother experience, it gives out a message to the public that says ‘this is all acceptable, so long as you don’t use any obvious language’. Similar to NYC’s banning of the N word, it seems to be saying racism and prejudice only exists at the level of name calling in society.
At the end of the day, it’s a minefield. An episode of South Park managed to say the n word 132 times in the space of twenty minutes and still be considered progressive in some sense, and their pint sized Archie Bunker character Eric Cartman comes out with things that would make Emily look like Gandhi. When this programme encourages you to at least engage with the subject of racism through what the writers call ‘equal opportunity offenders’ it kind of does the exact opposite of what banning the word, be it from TV or society will actually do, which is quite obvious in the reaction to this latest mess, it keeps the divides; liberal vs conservative, blacks vs whites, power games. makes nice telly though.
