The BBC lower Irish trio Kneecap from the broadcaster’s stay protection of the Glastonbury music competition Saturday after the group started chanting “F–okay Keir Starmer,” a reference to the British Prime Minister, throughout their set.
The information was shared by Puck Information reporter Julia Alexander, who famous on X, “Fascinating media story. BBC cuts stay stream, says VOD can be accessible (which after all permits for edits). Comes simply a few days after the UK’s present tradition minister instructed she didn’t need to see it, whereas noting she couldn’t exert management a technique or one other.”
As Alexander additionally famous, “That transfer then leads individuals to stream on TikTok, choosing up a whole lot of hundreds of views (doubtless much more).”
The broadcaster additionally got here underneath fireplace after musical act Bob Vylan led the gang, lots of whom had been waving Palestinian flags, in chants of “loss of life to the IDF,” the Telegraph reported. Bob Vylan carried out immediately forward of Kneecap.
“We strongly condemn the threatening feedback made by Bob Vylan at Glastonbury,” a spokesperson for Lisa Nandy, the tradition secretary for the U.Ok., mentioned. “The Tradition Secretary has spoken to the BBC director-general to hunt an pressing rationalization about what due diligence it carried out forward of the Bob Vylan efficiency, and welcomes the choice to not re-broadcast it on BBC iPlayer.”
The Guardian reported Kneecap kicked off the group’s set by chanting, “F–okay Keir Starmer!” after Starmer mentioned June 21 that permitting the band to carry out on the competition was “not applicable.”
In November, the group’s Liam Óg Ó hAnnaidh, who’s also referred to as Mo Chara, was charged with a terror-related offense after holding a Hezbollah flag at a London present.
“We perceive colonialism and we perceive how vital it’s to assist one another internationally,” Ó hAnnaidh, who was clad in a Palestinian keffiyeh, mentioned. Of the greater than 200 Palestinian flags being waved within the crowd, he added, “The BBC editor goes to have some job.”