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The BBC came under fire after Bob Vylan's controversial Glastonbury performance remained on iPlayer for five hours.
The last thing on BBC Director General Tim Davie’s mind as he visited with staff during this weekend’s Glastonbury Music Festival in Somerset, England was controversy. As evening descended upon the ...
Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy is being pushed to intervene following a “series of high-profile blunders” which the group ...
July 5 (UPI) -- Brothers Liam and Noel Gallagher reunited their band Oasis in Cardiff, Wales, Friday night. The Gallaghers ...
The boss of a music festival said she received death threats from pro-Palestinian activists after dropping controversial rap ...
Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy has said she asked the BBC why nobody has been fired for airing a Gaza documentary which ...
The singer, who will play in Glasgow on Friday, said "seeing how much of that pro-Palestine messaging was cut from the BBC ...
The BBC instructed a number of its senior staff to “step back” from their duties on music and live events, following the broadcast of Bob Vylan's “Death to the IDF” chant in Glastonbury, the BBC ...
The BBC is set to publish a review into the controversial Gaza: How To Survive A Warzone which was aired in February and was ...
Browne is the fourth minister to hold the office since Simon Coveney promised in 2017 to end the phenomenon of families ...
For a distinctly unremarkable man Keir Starmer has had quite a remarkable week. First, he managed to pull off that never-seen-before trick of achieving a humiliating victory in Parliament on Tuesday.
Chanting “Death to the IDF” is not edgy or brave. It’s despicable. If Britain cannot say that clearly and without a proviso, then it has lost its moral compass.