BBC Edited Out ‘Free Palestine’ Remark From BAFTA Winner’s Speech But Decided To Air N-Word Outburst

The BBC is catching some flack over its BAFTAs coverage after editing out ‘Free Palestine’ from a winner’s speech, while keeping in the N-word that was yelled by Tourette’s campaigner John Davidson.

There was a 2-hour delay between the BAFTA event and the BBC airing it last night, so people are baffled as to why the Beeb managed to remove ‘Free Palestine’ from the broadcast but not the N-word.

During his acceptance speech for ‘My Father’s Shadow’, which won the BAFTA for outstanding British debut, filmmaker Akinola Davies Jr said: “For Nigeria, for London, the Congo, Sudan, free Palestine”…

Meanwhile, John Davidson’s Tourette’s-triggered N-word was heard clear as day while actor Michael B. Jordan and Delroy Lindo were on stage…

A BBC spokesperson stated the three-hour live event had to be reduced to two hours for its time slot, and that edits were made across various speeches to ensure the program was “delivered to time”.

Obviously that is complete b0llocks and not the reason that this section of Akinola Davies Jr’s speech was removed. The truth is that the BBC was on high alert for politically charged remarks following that whole drama with the “Death to the IDF” chant during Glastonbury last year.

I guess they were so preoccupied with ensuring there was no “antisemitism” on the night that they completely overlooked anything else that might cause offence. What if John Davidson had yelled out ‘Free Palestine’? That would have been interesting.

As such, the BBC is getting it from all angles today. Many, including ‘Sinners’ production designer Hannah Beachler, argued it was “perverse” and “negligent” to edit out a political statement for time while leaving a racial slur in a pre-recorded broadcast.

It seems no matter how hard they try or how many precautions they try to take, the BBC always ballses it up somehow.

For Jamie Foxx’s take on the situation, click HERE. He ain’t having it…

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