Since posting
my thoughts on the denouement of the Berena storyline on Holby City and where the BBC had failed
LGBTQ audiences, I’ve been more active on Twitter than I have on here. First
and foremost my attention has been on the community of women most hurt by what
happened, but I too am grieving the loss of characters that I cherished, so
some time away during the holiday period was welcome. I have also been talking
to a number of women about action(s) that can be taken now in order to ensure
that the BBC recognises what has happened, and that the corporation and other
programme makers can avoid doing such harm to an LGBTQ audience again. The campaign website, #BerenaDeservedBetter, launched on Monday 7 January 2019.
Having this week seen the
BBC’s response to a Berena fan’s complaint about the handling of the storyline
in the latter part of 2018, the importance of getting the BBC to engage with us is clear. This is,
verbatim, what was sent back:
"Holby City is a
fictional drama, and therefore has to be viewed in this context. We feel that
our viewers understand this, and are also aware that any character in a drama
is an individual rather than a 'type' to represent whole groups of people. No
single character is intended to represent a profession, culture or any other
group of people – they are individuals first and foremost. We don't wish to
portray a stereotype or an offensive attitude in a way that might appear to
condone or encourage it. These individuals are accountable for their own unique
actions and attitudes. Whilst we appreciate your concerns about this storyline,
we have no evidence to suggest that it has caused 'widespread distress' among
audience members."
It will be immediately
obvious to those who have been following this storyline for the past two years
and more, that this response contradicts entirely the way that Holby City has
discussed Berena up until now. Those involved in making the show have
repeatedly talked precisely in terms of representation and of the
community that such representation serves, across television and press interviews, in discussing the presence of gay
characters on Points of View, and in collecting an award from DIVA magazine for Best LGBT Storyline in
June 2018. The idea that there is no evidence of distress is also laughable to
anyone who participates in online fan spaces; it may be the case that this
distress is not ‘widespread’ when Berena fans are considered as part of the
larger Holby City audience, but again, this kind of quantitative
thinking has until now been absent. When the show was receiving praise for its
portrayal of women-loving women, it did not once rebuff the suggestion that
this fictional story was representative, or that it might have an emotional
impact on viewers. The BBC cannot be permitted to change the terms in which it
discusses its content according to expedience or comfort. (And, taking this
response to its logical conclusion, how does any fictional portrayal come to be
considered in terms of representation? What is the threshold? If it exists,
shouldn’t audiences be aware of it?)
It is also worth taking a
look at Ofcom’s
research into representation and portrayal on the BBC, which is part of its role
as regulator, and which was published in late October 2018. Ofcom’s report
points out that one of the BBC’s ‘public purposes’ is ‘to serve, reflect and
represent diverse communities of the UK […] the BBC should accurately and
authentically represent and portray the lives of people across the UK’. The
report refers throughout to fictional and non-fictional content without
differentiating between the two in the way that the BBC’s response, above, seeks
to. Neither does the BBC’s own diversity commissioning code of practice, set
out in March 2018, exclude fictional content from its requirement that
programmes authentically represent a diverse range of people.
Viewers who spoke to Ofcom in 2018 said that they
felt ‘LGBT representation was skewed towards men, with less representation of
women’ and that older LGBT people were often absent; in their content analysis,
Ofcom found that gay or bisexual men appeared five times more frequently than
lesbian or bisexual women. (There is some irony to the fact that the Berena
storyline ended in the background of the wedding of a gay and a bisexual man.)
The Ofcom research was intended to inform the BBC in
its efforts to improve representation, and those efforts are critical to the
BBC’s Operating Licence. The BBC has also made its own commitments to diversity and inclusion (see here). Rather than dismissing viewers in the way it appears
to have done so far, the BBC ought to be taking our complaints far more
seriously and engaging in good faith.
If anyone else has received a response from
the BBC, I would be interested to see it. You can email
me at g.turner@liverpool.ac.uk.
Comments
The subject matter of this complaint is a ship on a prime time television show involving a continuing character and a former continuing character. This is both representation and portrayal at its most potent.
Holby City remind me again why you won that Diva award? Wasn't it for representation? Oh "no representation here" Oh sorry, so maybe you should just quietly return that award then. I suspect that you are going to get a whole load of complaints you might like to pay better attention to the response as this is just shockingly ignorant.