Peter Parka
Well-Known Member
I don't expect most of you guys across the pond have heard much about this but it's been really big on the news over here and has set a record for the most complained about telly program ever. I'm referring to the current series of Celebrity Big Brother where a Bollywood actress is being bullyed by other contestants. Here's the full story from bbc.co.uk. I was wondering, do you consider this just bullying behaviour or has it streched to racism too?
How the Big Brother row erupted
As the outside world continues to debate the alleged racism in the Big Brother house, the celebrities inside remain blissfully unaware of the attention some of them are receiving.
The treatment of Bollywood star Shilpa Shetty on the Channel 4 show has led to thousands of complaints being made to the broadcasting watchdog, Ofcom.
The housemates in the spotlight are Jade Goody, famous for appearing in Big Brother 3; Danielle Lloyd, a former Miss Great Britain; and Jo O'Meara, former singer with pop act S Club 7.
You don't know where those hands have been
Danielle Lloyd talking about Shilpa Shetty
But the first sign of trouble came when Jackiey Budden, Goody's mother, was introduced to the show.
She failed to pronounce Shetty's name properly and began calling her "the Indian" or "Princess".
House conflict
Since then, things have gone from bad to worse for the 31-year-old actress.
Goody, O'Meara, Lloyd and Jack Tweed - Goody's boyfriend - have formed a small group who appear to spend a lot of time complaining about her and mimicking her voice.
Other housemates have so far avoided getting involved in the conflict. However, one housemate - former Steps singer Ian "H" Watkins - has recognised there is a problem.
He has been seen crying, and admitted to Big Brother he did not like the behaviour in the house.
"There's a lot of name calling and petty things," he said. "It's clearly school ground behaviour. It's almost like bullying. It's really, really unfair."
Cooking complaint
Following a discussion the group had with Shetty about how long it took to cook a chicken, Goody, O'Meara amd Lloyd decided she had made them all ill.
"No wonder I keep getting the s***s," commented O'Meara.
Others complained that Shetty had touched housemates' food with her hands after she picked up morsels from people's plates.
Lloyd said: "You don't know where those hands have been."
Following another meal, Shetty poured left-over chicken soup down the Big Brother toilet - much to the disgust of the others, who felt chicken bones could cause a blockage.
"Why didn't it just go down the sink?" asked O'Meara. "She grates me so badly when she does things like that. What a stupid thing to do."
Tweed suggested Shetty should pick the bones out with her teeth, receiving the reply: "There's a lot more I want to do with my teeth."
Bad atmosphere
During a separate conversation, while Shetty was applying facial hair bleach, Lloyd asked whether the Bollywood star had stubble.
Later, Goody offered the opinion that skin lightening is common in India, where paler skin is considered desirable.
"She's a dog," said Lloyd.
Some fans have claimed Tweed referred to Shetty using a four-letter racial insult, which was bleeped out. However, Channel 4 has denied the word bleeped out was a racist term.
Shetty has been reduced to tears several times by the bad atmosphere.
In one late night conversation she sobbed after Goody told her she did not appear "genuine".
"I feel like I'm losing my dignity," she confided to Watkins on Sunday.
But, on Tuesday's show, the actress was seen telling Big Brother she was happy to have entered the house.
"This has really been like a learning curve for me," she said. "To actually be in the same house with people from a different culture altogether has been really, really hard.
"But it's cool now, once you get to know the mindset, once you get to know where the other person is coming from. "It's like a rollercoaster ride really."
How the Big Brother row erupted
As the outside world continues to debate the alleged racism in the Big Brother house, the celebrities inside remain blissfully unaware of the attention some of them are receiving.
The treatment of Bollywood star Shilpa Shetty on the Channel 4 show has led to thousands of complaints being made to the broadcasting watchdog, Ofcom.
The housemates in the spotlight are Jade Goody, famous for appearing in Big Brother 3; Danielle Lloyd, a former Miss Great Britain; and Jo O'Meara, former singer with pop act S Club 7.
You don't know where those hands have been
Danielle Lloyd talking about Shilpa Shetty
But the first sign of trouble came when Jackiey Budden, Goody's mother, was introduced to the show.
She failed to pronounce Shetty's name properly and began calling her "the Indian" or "Princess".
House conflict
Since then, things have gone from bad to worse for the 31-year-old actress.
Goody, O'Meara, Lloyd and Jack Tweed - Goody's boyfriend - have formed a small group who appear to spend a lot of time complaining about her and mimicking her voice.
Other housemates have so far avoided getting involved in the conflict. However, one housemate - former Steps singer Ian "H" Watkins - has recognised there is a problem.
He has been seen crying, and admitted to Big Brother he did not like the behaviour in the house.
"There's a lot of name calling and petty things," he said. "It's clearly school ground behaviour. It's almost like bullying. It's really, really unfair."
Cooking complaint
Following a discussion the group had with Shetty about how long it took to cook a chicken, Goody, O'Meara amd Lloyd decided she had made them all ill.
"No wonder I keep getting the s***s," commented O'Meara.
Others complained that Shetty had touched housemates' food with her hands after she picked up morsels from people's plates.
Lloyd said: "You don't know where those hands have been."
Following another meal, Shetty poured left-over chicken soup down the Big Brother toilet - much to the disgust of the others, who felt chicken bones could cause a blockage.
"Why didn't it just go down the sink?" asked O'Meara. "She grates me so badly when she does things like that. What a stupid thing to do."
Tweed suggested Shetty should pick the bones out with her teeth, receiving the reply: "There's a lot more I want to do with my teeth."
Bad atmosphere
During a separate conversation, while Shetty was applying facial hair bleach, Lloyd asked whether the Bollywood star had stubble.
Later, Goody offered the opinion that skin lightening is common in India, where paler skin is considered desirable.
"She's a dog," said Lloyd.
Some fans have claimed Tweed referred to Shetty using a four-letter racial insult, which was bleeped out. However, Channel 4 has denied the word bleeped out was a racist term.
Shetty has been reduced to tears several times by the bad atmosphere.
In one late night conversation she sobbed after Goody told her she did not appear "genuine".
"I feel like I'm losing my dignity," she confided to Watkins on Sunday.
But, on Tuesday's show, the actress was seen telling Big Brother she was happy to have entered the house.
"This has really been like a learning curve for me," she said. "To actually be in the same house with people from a different culture altogether has been really, really hard.
"But it's cool now, once you get to know the mindset, once you get to know where the other person is coming from. "It's like a rollercoaster ride really."