Fiona Bruce apologises for calling Question Time viewers member 'the black man'

Read more

Fiona Bruce has apologised for referring to an viewers member as "the black guy" throughout an episode of Question Time.

Read more

The presenter, 59, was making an attempt to decide on somebody to contribute to Thursday's debate, when she mentioned: "The guy there in the middle, the black guy in the middle. Yes, you sir."

Read more

The remark has been faraway from the BBC iPlayer model of the episode.

Read more

The BBC additionally apologised for her selection of phrases.

Read more

In a press release, Bruce apologised and mentioned she was "wrong to identify him [the man] as I did".

Read more

"I totally understand why my words last night caused offence, and I apologise," she mentioned within the assertion, launched via the BBC.

Read more

She mentioned she had since spoken to the viewers member straight.

Read more

"[I] explained that usually I can see and describe an item of clothing or otherwise to help sound engineers with a microphone find people in the audience.

Read more

"Last night time that was not the case as my view was obscured.

Read more

"In the split second I had, the easiest thing to do would have been to ignore the audience member and move on, but I felt strongly that his voice should be heard."

Read more

Read extra from Sky News:BBC makes assertion over Top Gear's futureGary Lineker backs new BBC impartiality guidelines

Read more

A BBC spokesperson mentioned: "The intent was to ensure his voice was heard, however we recognise we should not have identified him in this way and apologise for any offence caused.

Read more

"As such the recorded model on iPlayer has been edited to take away this."

Read more

Bruce has hosted Question Time since 2019.

Read more

The newsreader, who has been with the BBC since 1989, took over the role from long-serving presenter and journalist David Dimbleby.

Read more

Earlier this year, Bruce was also accused by some of trivialising domestic violence during a debate on the show.

Read more

She said she was "required to legally contextualise" a press release about Boris Johnson's father Stanley and that her feedback weren't reflective of her personal opinions.

Read more

Nevertheless, she later introduced she was stepping down as ambassador for home violence charity Refuge .

Read more

Content Source: information.sky.com

Read more

Did you like this story?

Please share by clicking this button!

Visit our site and see all other available articles!

US 99 News