LONDON, Nov. 8, 2008

BBC Broadcasts Apology For Prank Calls

Radio Stunt Had Left Lewd Messages On "Fawlty Towers" Actor's Voicemail

    • File photos of Jonathan Ross (left) and Russell Brand, the BBC Radio personalities whose lewd voicemails led to an embarrassed British Broadcasting Corporation issuing a public apology. Photo

      File photos of Jonathan Ross (left) and Russell Brand, the BBC Radio personalities whose lewd voicemails led to an embarrassed British Broadcasting Corporation issuing a public apology.  (Press Association via AP Images)

    • Georgina Baillie and the Satanic Sluts arrive at Secret's Lap Dancing club in central London, Nov. 5, 2008. Photo

      Georgina Baillie and the Satanic Sluts arrive at Secret's Lap Dancing club in central London, Nov. 5, 2008.  (Ian West/Press Assn. Via AP Images)

    • Actor Andrew Sachs outside his home in north London, October 29, 2008. He said he was Photo

      Actor Andrew Sachs outside his home in north London, October 29, 2008. He said he was "not surprised" by the suspension by the BBC of Russell Brand and Jonathan Ross.  (Press Association via AP Images)

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(CBS/AP)  The BBC broadcast an apology Saturday for lewd phone messages left by two radio presenters on an actor's voicemail.

The publicly funded broadcaster said it apologized unreservedly for the "grossly offensive and unacceptable" prank.

The BBC was forced to defend its editorial standards after comedian Russell Brand and fellow presenter Jonathan Ross left sexually explicit messages on the phone of 78-year old actor Andrew Sachs about his granddaughter.

The calls were played on Brand's radio show on Oct. 18, and initially drew few complaints.

But media coverage and the posting of the calls on the Internet fueled a furor that saw more than 40,000 people complain.

Even Prime Minister Gordon Brown condemned the prank, calling the stunt "clearly inappropriate and unacceptable."

Ross and Brand had left phone messages for Sachs, who played the put-upon waiter Manuel on the classic BBC comedy "Fawlty Towers," claiming they had had sex with his granddaughter, 23-year-old dancer Georgina Baillie.

Baillie told the Sun newspaper that the comedians were "beyond contempt," and that Brand and Ross should "pay for what they've done with their jobs."

The BBC said Saturday that the stunt "was a serious breach of editorial standards, and should never have been recorded or broadcast."

(BBC)
(Left: The cast of the classic BBC comedy series "Fawlty Towers." Clockwise from top: John Cleese, Andrew Sachs, Prunella Scales and Connie Booth.)

Brand quit his BBC show after the scandal and Ross has been suspended for 12 weeks without pay. Two senior BBC executives have resigned.

Ross also announced that he will not present this year's British Comedy Awards.

The apology was broadcast Saturday during the slot usually occupied by Ross's show. It was being repeated later during Brand's former evening slot.

After their suspensions were announced, Baillie said that she and her grandfather were both "really happy.

"I'm glad it's all over with, as far as I'm concerned," Baillie said.

But in an interview about the furor to be broadcast by the BBC this Wednesday, Baillie said that while she angrily called for the two to be fired, she thinks their suspension is good enough.

"I think it's way out of proportion what's happened and I don't hate either of them - I don't at all.

"I think they're really talented comedians and I think a world without Jonathan Ross and Russell Brand would be a very sad, dull place."

© MMVIII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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by credibility2 November 8, 2008 3:20 PM EST
All one has to do is look at the picture of these two juvenile mongrels. This is part of the legacy of many of today''s young, which includes them being immoral, stupid, humorless, offensive and beyond immature. If the BBC had any sense and credibility, it would fire the two punks immediately. We have plenty of this in our own nation and most of us aren''t laughing.
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by caliengineer November 8, 2008 5:49 PM EST
Accolades to all who complained. What is vomited into the media as humor today is repulsive.

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by thisandthat1 November 8, 2008 7:17 PM EST
What the BBC should be apologizing for is that they didn''t fire these two (or at least Brand) a lot sooner than they did!
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by timothyone-2009 November 8, 2008 7:21 PM EST
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1081722/Georgina-Baillie-Russell-Brand-obsessed-Fawlty-Towers-grandfather-bed.html

If she were my granddaughter I would have told her to suck it up and stop being a ho and she won''t be called one.

After a good look at the *** in question I wonder why she couldn''t have just taken the joke, after all she obviously doesn''t take her own self-respect any more seriously than her former *** partner Brand did. By making a big deal of it she further exposed her extreme ********** to the world. (or was that the Pamela Anderson/Paris Hilton idea)

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by luvcomments November 8, 2008 9:26 PM EST
I have no idea why the BBC and others label this as a "prank". A "prank" is an antic that high school kids kids might do and is usually not dangerous or highly disgusting. These bozos are, in years, adults. Says a lot for the overly permissive way they were raised: no respect, no self-discipline, no responibility. These two should have been fired immediately. If parents don''t teach consideration for others, or self-discipline, and/or if they neglect to aquaint their precious offspring with the word "no" when appropriate, then one will simply have to learn it the hard way when employers and community show them what it means.
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