BBC Radio character ‘was treated like sex object’

THE BBC launched an investigation after a listener complained that Samantha - the imaginary scorer on long-running Radio 4 comedy show I’m Sorry I Haven’t a Clue - was being treated as “a sexual object”.
The BBC launched the probe after a handful of complaints. Picture: PAThe BBC launched the probe after a handful of complaints. Picture: PA
The BBC launched the probe after a handful of complaints. Picture: PA

The programme, which has run for more than 40 years, features comics including Jack Dee and Barry Cryer who regularly refer to the fictional “lovely Samantha”.

The listener complained about two episodes in July last year which she said included “highly sexist, offensive and harmful” references to the character.

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A BBC Trust report said: “She considered that Samantha was only referred to as a sexual object and believed the male panellists used ‘schoolboy sexist so-called humour’, that was ‘both puerile and unfunny’.”

The report referred to examples of innuendo included on the show, including a description of the character as “a lovely lady who’s scored on more desks than she can remember”.

In one episode, listeners were told that Samantha was going to the cinema with two men who were fans of horror films because “she enjoys nothing better than sitting in the back row and being given the willies for 90 minutes”.

The programme was defended by its producer, who said using innuendo was “part of the programme’s tradition of wordplay and punning” and was appreciated by “the vast majority of listeners”.

The listener took her complaint to the BBC Trust and quoted a United Nations Special Rapporteur on Violence Against Women who said the UK had a “boys’ club sexist culture”.

She also got in touch with the producer who told her the show would book more female panellists and feature Sven, described as the “male equivalent of Samantha”, more often.

It would also be made clear that Samantha was “often the initiator in these relationships to avoid the suggestion that she was being taken advantage of”.

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The Trust’s Editorial Standards Committee said it “could understand why some listeners believed that this type of humour was outdated”, but said “the majority of listeners were familiar with the content of the show and enjoyed the wordplay associated with the innuendo”.

Samantha’s ‘erotic’ adventures

The show’s tradition of innuendo was established by its late host Humphrey Lyttelton who regularly regaled listeners with tales of her erotic adventures.

Here are three such examples...

• Samantha spent many hours in conversation with the BBC gramophone library research staff for this round, deliberating over the fine old 7-inchers they presented for inspection. She says before deciding which she was going to spin she had to think about each one long and hard.

• Samantha has to nip off to the National Opera where she’s been giving private tuition to the singers. Having seen what she did to the baritone, the director is keen to see what she might do for a tenor.

• Samantha has to go now as she’s off to meet her Italian gentleman friend who’s taking her out for an ice cream. She says she likes nothing better than to spend the evening licking the nuts off a large Neapolitan.

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