Since my family gets the Daily Mail (the shame!

) it was particularly amusing to see the paper reporting in the days following the broadcast just
how disgusting the programme was and then proceed to reproduce, in a four or five page feature, detailed colour pictures of the most digusting and unacceptable parts along with a detailed transcript of the entire episode. (I particularly remember that the paper got very incensed by Morris putting his children to bed in drawers of a filing cabinet to make certain that they would be 'safe' from paedophiles, a section of the show that didn't seem particularly controversial when set against a lot of the other stuff!) Surely a late night broadcast of the programme, even if it was repeated again even later at night, had less power to corrupt than hundreds of thousands of copies of a daily newspaper delivered across the country, and which presumably could be left strewn around train stations, buses, parks, used to wrap chips in, etc?
It was almost as if the journalists were aiming to infuriate their readership into protest by making sure they did not miss any controversial element, no matter how small, of a programme that they would not have otherwise encountered by their own choice. :-k
But that, as I'm sure Jonathan Ross and Russell Brand (or Frankie Boyle most recently) would attest, could never happen again.
MichaelB wrote:If you're not familiar with Brass Eye, you need to know upfront that every single celebrity and politician was under the impression that they were contributing to a serious campaigning documentary, and that Phil Collins was utterly oblivious of the fact that the name "Nonce Sense" means something else when read aloud (hilariously, he threatened to sue when he found out).
I thought the one from the drugs episode was great too, getting celebrities to campaign against Cake, a "totally made up drug"!