Lewd BBC prank calls probed
LONDON - Britain's media watchdog said yesterday that it was investigating a series of lewd prank telephone calls made by two celebrities on a BBC radio show. The calls, by comedian Russell Brand and television personality Jonathan Ross, were broadcast on Brand's radio show.
LONDON - Britain's media watchdog said yesterday that it was investigating a series of lewd prank telephone calls made by two celebrities on a BBC radio show. The calls, by comedian Russell Brand and television personality Jonathan Ross, were broadcast on Brand's radio show.
Brand has built a career on his outlandish image and risque routines, but his calls to 78-year-old actor Andrew Sachs have sparked hundreds of complaints and drawn condemnation in Parliament.
Brand and Ross left a series of messages on the voice mail of the actor, best known for playing Spanish waiter Manuel in 1970s sitcom
Fawlty Towers
.
Ross jokingly claimed Brand had slept with Sachs' 23-year-old granddaughter, and the pair discussed how Sachs might hang himself as a result of this news. The pair made further calls in which they ostensibly attempted to apologize but continued to leave lewd messages.
The calls were recorded Oct. 16 and aired on Brand's radio show two days later. The initial broadcast drew few complaints, but the BBC said that by Tuesday the number had reached 4,700.
The BBC has apologized, saying some of the calls' content was "unacceptable and offensive." Ross, 47, and Brand, 33, also have said they are sorry.
Sachs said he was angry "but not half as angry as Georgina," his granddaughter.
"That's where the apology should be directed," he said.
Several politicians have called on the BBC to fire Ross and Brand, who are among the network's most popular broadcasters. The BBC receives most of its funding through a license fee of almost 140 pounds ($220) levied on every British household with a TV.