Editorial Complaints Unit<\/em>] said it had been “legitimate” for Panorama to examine concerns about wi-fi raised by chairman of the Health Protection Agency Sir William Stewart.<\/p>\nBut it said the programme included only one contributor, Prof Repacholi, who disagreed with Sir William, compared with three scientists and a number of other speakers who supported him.<\/p>\n
“This gave a misleading impression of the state of scientific opinion on the issue,” the ECU said.<\/p>\n
“In addition, Prof Repacholi’s contribution was presented in a context which suggested to viewers that his scientific independence was in question, whereas the other scientists were presented uncritically.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n
So, not quite the resounding criticism I wanted, but a start.<\/p>\n
The depressing part of this is that nothing will change and the damage has been done. Panorama has quite high viewing figures, the episode is out and available for the terminally insane to reinforce their nonsense with and, basically, an apology hidden in BBC News does nothing to reverse that. It seems the BBC has decided to respond to this upheld complaint by:<\/p>\n
Panorama said it was now planning a meeting to explore issues of balance and fair dealing with contributors in relation to scientific and medical topics.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n
Blah, blah. Meaningless weasel words. Nothing will change. No one will be told off. But they will waste a few hours drinking coffee as they “explore” a concept they seem completely ignorant of. What a waste of the taxpayers money.<\/p>\n