Foul language on TV set to rise after Ofcom finds that viewers can ‘tolerate’ it
The watchdog claims people were more offended by discriminatory language than old fashioned swearing
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SWEARING on TV is set to rise after Ofcom said viewers “tolerate” it.
People were more offended by discriminatory language, the watchdog claimed.
It published a new guide to offensive terms after consulting viewers, with the C-word worst.
“F***”, loved by chef Gordon Ramsay, and “motherf*****” were unacceptable but “s***” deemed less so.
Substitute oaths such as “feck” were just as bad if used too much, it found.
Repeated beeping over swearwords pre-watershed was also ineffective, it said, often drawing attention to bad language.
But it said viewers tolerate swearing post-watershed if “it reflected the real world”.
Discriminatory language, including racism, was less acceptable, Ofcom’s research suggests.
It also ranked gestures for the first time, with the V-sign and middle finger deemed “medium”.
But signals imitating oral sex and masturbation were “strong”.