Jeremy Clarkson may have apologised, but the outrage over his comments on public sector strikers being shot continues – with more than 21,000 complaints to the BBC by early Friday morning.
BBC faces biggest complaints storm since ‘Sachsgate’ row as Top Gear presenter claims he discussed commments in advance
The row over Clarkson’s remarks on Wednesday night’s The One Show looks set to outdo the “Sachsgate” controversy in 2008, which prompted the resignation of Russell Brand and led to Jonathan Ross’s suspension without pay. By 9.30am on Friday, the BBC had received 21,335 complaints.
Radio 2′s broadcast of lewd comments left by Brand and Ross on Andrew Sachs’s voicemail provoked more than 27,000 complaints – although the outrage did not begin until a week after transmission, when the Mail on Sunday ran a story.
Channel 4 and media regulator Ofcom received nearly 10,000 complaints following the Celebrity Big Brother race row in January 2007.
Clarkson and the BBC were at the centre of a growing storm on Thursday after David Cameron and Ed Miliband admonished the Top Gear presenter’s flippant remarks.
Asked about the public sector strikes on Wednesday’s The One Show, Clarkson said:
“I’d have them all shot. I would take them outside and execute them in front of their families.”
He added: “I mean, how dare they go on strike when they’ve got these gilt-edged pensions that are going to be guaranteed while the rest of us have to work for a living?”
Clarkson is understood to have discussed making a joke about the strike with The One Show’s production team before the live programme went on air.
Both Clarkson and the BBC have insisted the remarks were taken out of context. Clarkson said in a statement on Thursday night:
“I didn’t for a moment intend these remarks to be taken seriously – as I believe is clear if they’re seen in context. If the BBC and I have caused any offence, I’m quite happy to apologise for it alongside them.”
The presenter told the Daily Mirror:
“I support the strikers in the first part. I said it was like being in the 1970s, my favourite decade. Then I said, but this is the BBC so we have to be impartial, and I expressed an extreme version of the other side of the coin, neither of which I believe.
“I expressed two different views. Which one do I apologise for?
I am just making fun of the BBC’s need to be impartial. Not about strikers. I wasn’t saying that strikers should be shot.”
Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2011/dec/02/jeremy-clarkson-one-show-rant-complaints