Express.co.uk - Home of the Daily and Sunday Express Express - Breaking news, sport and showbiz from the World's Greatest Newspaper
Newspaper Cover Page
Our Paper

Front and Back Pages, E-Edition and Back Issues...

Weather
 8°C
London
Monday 22nd March 2010 Make us your HOME PAGE  What is RSS?

SHOWBIZ

BBC APOLOGY OVER OLYMPICS 'FAKERY'

Story Image


Armando Iannucci spotted misleading BBC footage of Olympics event

Sunday August 24,2008

The BBC has said it regretted broadcasting footage from the Olympics in the wrong order.

Live coverage of Chinese hopeful Liu Xiang was distorted in error on this week's Ten O'Clock News.

The BBC said it regretted broadcasting the misleading footage, after Armando Iannucci, the writer whose credits include BBC political satire The Thick of It and Alan Partridge, brought the incident to light at a conference of top broadcasters.

The original footage showed the athlete, who has been dubbed the David Beckham of China, kicking a mat in frustration before going on to the track and realising he could not go on. To the dismay of three billion Chinese, he pulled out of the men's 110 metres hurdles and fled the track because of an Achilles tendon problem.

On Monday night's news bulletin, it was made to look as though China's only male Olympic champion was kicking the mat in frustration at pulling out.

Iannucci told the Edinburgh International Television Festival: "A man kicking a mat in frustration on his way into a stadium before a race is quietly re-edited to make it look like he's kicking it on the way out after the race.

"The laws of time are bent, millions of pounds spent on editorial bootcamps and Truth and Values waterboarding sessions are rendered unto dust, and once again ... British television industry comes crashing to its knees."

A BBC spokesperson said the footage was a mistake. The spokesman said: "In relation to footage shown at the Edinburgh Television Festival's Alternative MacTaggart Lecture, in a news package of the events surrounding Liu Xiang's Olympic 110m hurdle heats and his subsequent withdrawal from the event due to injury, a sequence of editing was mistakenly broadcast in the wrong order on some BBC news bulletins.

"After the event pictures showing the athlete's intense frustration were sent to the news desk without time coding and were mistakenly edited into the report.

"While this did not alter the editorial direction of our reports, we regret that these pictures were not shown in chronological order. In the sports coverage of the event shots were shown in the correct order."


Share...

Got A Story? Get in touch online
Email the news desk directly here!


Doctor Who 'should become a movie'

The new boss of Doctor Who has revealed that he would like to see the hit TV sho...

Read More Comment Speech Bubble Have Your Say(0)

Famous Five set to make a comeback

Some of Enid Blyton's best-loved characters are to return in a new series of adv...

Read More Comment Speech Bubble Have Your Say(0)

Perry holds top spot for third week

American former gospel singer Katy Perry has held on to her number one spot for ...

Read More Comment Speech Bubble Have Your Say(0)

Todays best TV right here for you at the Express. • See Guide

The Political Cartoonist of the Year