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Citizen khan - pakistanis tv series in BBC

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Sitcom Citizen Khan prompts 185 complaints to the BBC
Mr Khan The six-part series follows a Muslim community worker in Birmingham

The BBC has been accused of stereotyping Muslims in its new sitcom Citizen Khan.

The broadcaster has received 185 complaints since the first episode aired on BBC One on Monday, with some claiming it was a "tasteless depiction of Islam".

Complaints have risen overnight, but the BBC said it has evidence of a lobbying campaign.

The six-part series follows a Muslim community worker in Birmingham.

It was created by British Muslim, Adil Ray, who also stars in the show.

Other members of the cast include My Family star Kris Marshall as a mosque manager and Shobu Kapoor, who played Gita in EastEnders, as Mrs Khan.
"Insulting"

The media watchdog, Ofcom, said it received in the region of 20 complaints about the programme.

One viewer who complained to the BBC said the show "insulted" and "ridiculed" Islam.

"We feel though as if this show has crossed the line and we expected a comedy show but now we have witnessed a mocking show," said the viewer.

But others, commenting on a BBC messageboard following Monday night's broadcast defended the show.

Referring to a scene in which a teenage daughter hastily changed her attire before her father entered the room, one said: "People are reading too much into Citizen Khan, especially the hijab thing, it happens!"

Comedian Humza Arshad, star of the hit internet comedy Diary of a Badman, told the BBC's Asian Network that he felt some of the jokes went "a bit too far".

"I wasn't offended but I think some other people might be. For example, the scene with the Quran. Personally I'd play it safe. Some people might complain about it - I've got similar feedback myself by the audience, the Muslim community is one of the most sensitive communities out there."

Former Secretary General of the Muslim Council of Britain, Yousuf Bhailok, said the show was "the best thing the BBC has done recently".

"It is good to change the stereotyped image of Muslims always being serious and shouting that has appeared so often in the media," he said.

"There is great humour among Muslims. I am glad it has been made."

Independent reviews of the show have been mixed, with the website, Asian Image saying it split opinion.

"Asians will easily identify with the over-emotional Mrs Khan, the daughter who lives a double life and the sensitive Amjad," said reviewer Amjad Malik

"It was stereo-typical because in many respects that is what comedy is about.

"The jokes were a little poor in parts but I sense the criticism is a little unfair."

Arifa Akbar, writing in The Independent, said it wasn't a bad comedy, "it just wasn't new".

"Comedy doesn't have a duty to represent real people, but it does need to be funny, and while a family comedy requires a broad appeal, this is no reason to unspool recycled jokes that worked a treat 40 years ago," said Akbar.

The criticism was echoed in the Daily Star, which added: "The show's weakness isn't so much that it's a niche comedy but the fact that its style feels incredibly dated, like an old-fashioned studio sitcom from 20-odd years back."

Meanwhile, a review in The Guardian described the sitcom as "un-bold" and "safe".

The BBC said the first episode of Citizen Khan was watched by 3.6 million viewers, which it described as a "very positive start".

A spokeswoman said: "We're delighted that so many people enjoyed this new comedy and we have received a number of appreciations from members of the Muslim community and beyond in praise of the show and for creator Adil Ray, who like the family portrayed, is a British Pakistani Muslim.

"Alongside these appreciations, a small percentage of viewers have complained to the BBC regarding the show's portrayal of the Muslim community.

"New comedy always provokes differing reactions from the audience and as with all sitcoms the characters are comic creations and not meant to be representative of the community as a whole," she added
 
Heavily made-up girl in a hijab provokes storm of complaints as BBC is accused of insulting Muslims with new sitcom Citizen Khan

It was probably unlikely that a TV comedy series about a Muslim community leader would pass without comment.

And so it was that in the region of 200 complaints were made to the BBC yesterday after it broadcast the first episode of Citizen Khan.

It was claimed that the programme ‘takes the mickey out of Islam’, was guilty of ‘stereotypes about Asians’ and was ‘disrespectful to the Koran’.
One scene that particularly provoked anger was where a heavily-made up girl, Mr Khan’s daughter, rushed to put on a hijab and pretended to be reading the Koran when her father entered.

The six-part series, which aired for the first time on BBC1 on Monday at 10.35pm, has been created by British Muslim Adil Ray, who also plays the lead role.
One viewer wrote on the BBC’s messageboard: ‘This is terrible stereotyping, ignorant and just dreadful.’

Another said: ‘HIGHLY disappointed especially when her father walks in and she dis-respectfully opens the Koran!!’

But others defended the show. One said: ‘People are reading too much in to Citizen Khan, especially the hijab thing, it happens!

The series stars former My Family actor Kris Marshall as the mosque manager and Shobu Kapoor, who is known for her work on EastEnders, who plays Mr Khan’s wife.

The comedy mocks Mr Khan’s self-importance, including his delusions about his position in the community and about his standing in the business world.

Critics have complained that it repeats many stereotypes about British Muslims, with the first episode all about the troubled wedding plans of one of Mr Khan’s daughters, Shazia.

Some claimed while Goodness Gracious Me, the acclaimed BBC2 Asian sketch show, had challenged stereotypes, the new show reinforced them.

The two other writers on the show, Anil Gupta and Richard Pinto, had both worked on Goodness Gracious Me.

A BBC spokesman said: ‘Citizen Khan has made a very positive start, launching successfully with 3.6million viewers and a 21.5 per cent share in a late-night slot.

'New comedy always provokes differing reactions from the audience. The characters are comic creations and not meant to be representative of the community as a whole.'

In a recent interview with BBC Breakfast, Mr Ray said the show was allowing the Muslim community to laugh at itself.

He said: 'I think it is a great opportunity, with Mr Khan as a Pakistani Muslim and the character, to take that kind of really rich content and laugh at ourselves and I am a firm believer in that.'

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'Disrespectful': Critics have complained that the show repeats many stereotypes about British Muslims

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Criticism: One viewer wrote on the BBC's messageboard that the show was 'terrible stereotyping, ignorant and just dreadful'
 
Exposed: Citizen Khan and the Daily Mail’s anti-Muslim bias

BBC accused of insulting Muslims with new sitcom Citizen Khan as 200 complain about first episode

Revoir notes:

It was probably unlikely that a TV comedy series about a Muslim community leader would pass without comment.

Why’s that, then? Is it because all telly shows are routinely reviewed in the papers’ TV sections? Or is this a special sort of show because it’s about Asian Muslims?

And so it was that in the region of 200 complaints were made to the BBC yesterday after it broadcast the first episode of Citizen Khan.

200. Not edgy enough. When it gets to 20,000, we’ll have a look. In 2009, the PCC received over 22,000 complaints about Mail hack Jan Moir’s words on the “unnatural” death of homosexual singer Stephen Gately. Thanks to Moir, the PCC received more complaints in a single weekend than it has had in the past five years. Who then didn’t read her piece?

Maybe Revoir can get us angry enough to add to that paltry 200:

It was claimed that the programme ‘takes the mickey out of Islam’, was guilty of ‘stereotypes about Asians’ and was ‘disrespectful to the Koran’…

The programme’s “British Muslim creator” is Adil Ray. The show stars Bavna Limbachia, Maya Sondhi, and Shobu Kapoor. Revoir doesn’t say if those three are Muslim, nor if they are gay, Christian or anti-abortion.

One scene that particularly provoked anger was where a heavily-made up girl, Mr Khan’s daughter, rushed to put on a hijab and pretended to be reading the Koran when her father entered.

In her haste was the book upside down?

The six-part series, which aired for the first time on BBC1 on Monday at 10.35pm, has been created by British Muslim Adil Ray, who also plays the lead role.

One viewer wrote on the BBC’s messageboard: ‘This is terrible stereotyping, ignorant and just dreadful.’
Another said: ‘HIGHLY disappointed especially when her father walks in and she dis-respectfully opens the Koran!!’

And… Nothing. Nothing about insulting Muslims. And- get this- no bomb threats against the BBC and the show’s stars delivered by gurning loons.

A BBC spokesman said: ‘Citizen Khan has made a very positive start, launching successfully with 3.6million viewers and a 21.5 per cent share in a late night slot.”

Meanwhile, if Muslims want to be insulted, they can check out the news in the Daily Mail. These stories are from 2012:

Mail: “White Muslim convert who threatened to disrupt Royal Wedding among six held as police swoop in raids across London to stop ‘major terrorist attack’”

Mail: “Muslim converts who ‘plotted to attack Olympic canoeing venue’ arrested after police see them acting suspiciously in a dinghy”

Neither story – both still oline – contain the news update

Scotland Yard says an 18-year-old and a 32-year-old arrested at separate addresses in east London last week have been freed “with no further action.”



Mail: “More than two-thirds of young British Muslims believe honour violence is ‘acceptable’, survery reveals”

Only that was wrong (full story here):

..three times this number (i.e. 18%) in the entire sample selected one or more of five ‘reasonable justifications’ for physical punishment of female members of the family. The figure was highest among Asian Christians (23%), followed by Muslims (20%), Sikhs (14%), and Hindus (13%).

And this gem from late 2011:

Mail: Church fury over opening of McDonald’s on Christmas Day as Muslim manager is drafted in

“Church leaders have hit out at a branch of McDonald’s which is to open on Christmas Day”

A McDonald’s spokesman reveals:

“We expect there to be about 60 stores in the UK that remain open this year.”

But only he one with the Muilism manger made it into the Mail. (Full story here.)

And then there was the anti-Mulsim bacon-wafting cafe - the one owned by a ,er, Muslim.

If you want to see Muslims portrayed in a bad light, don’t watch the BBC.
 
Why have the muslims become intolerant, thought they were a peaceful religion? remember the LWT "Mind Your Language"?, the insults traded between the Muslim ( Pakistani) & the Sikh characters, surely if it was ran today, the Muslims would burn down the British High Commission every where in which they are found in those Muslims countries.
 
Why have the muslims become intolerant, thought they were a peaceful religion? remember the LWT "Mind Your Language"?, the insults traded between the Muslim ( Pakistani) & the Sikh characters, surely if it was ran today, the Muslims would burn down the British High Commission every where in which they are found in those Muslims countries.

They became intolerant & sensitive because of the constant abuse and ridiculing towards their believe system.
 
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