Ant and Dec wrongly given award in ITV 'fix scandal'
ITV in Ant and Dec in 'award fixing' scandal
Ant & Dec won the people's choice prize at the British Comedy Awards in 2005. There's one catch: the viewers voted for somebody else. It is one of an astonishing series of deceptions revealed in a damning report on...
Friday, May 09, 2008
When Robbie Williams was asked to present a prize at the British Comedy
Awards, he agreed, on the understanding that the gong would go to Anthony
McPartlin and Declan Donnelly, aka the golden boys of entertainment
television, Ant and Dec.
There was just one problem. Their ITV1 show, Ant and Dec's Saturday Night
Takeaway had not been chosen by any of the jury panels deciding the awards.
On the night of the ceremony in 2005, broadcast on ITV1, viewers were asked
to phone in to vote for the People's Choice Award.
Conveniently, Ant and Dec emerged victorious, and Williams got his moment
with his mates.
But an independent report by the law firm Olswang, published by ITV
yesterday, revealed that, if all the votes had been taken into account, The
Catherine Tate Show would have won.
There is no suggestion that Williams, McPartlin or Donnelly were aware of
any of those issues – a spokesman for Ant and Dec insisted they were "really
appalled" by what happened and would be returning their award.
But ITV chose to release the Olswang report on the same day that Ofcom,
after an entirely separate investigation, slapped a record £5.675m fine on
the broadcaster for cheating viewers out of millions of pounds in television
phone-in competitions.
A large proportion of that fine – the largest ever imposed on a broadcaster
by the watchdog – was incurred by Takeaway and Gameshow Marathon, both shows
presented by Ant and Dec.
Although McPartlin and Donnelly insist they knew nothing about it, producers
were routinely cheating viewers on phone-in competitions which were central
to the success of their shows.
The chairman of Ofcom, Ed Richards, said the watchdog had imposed the
sanctions after "a thorough set of investigations that uncovered
institutionalised failure within ITV that enabled the broadcaster to make
money from misconduct on mass audience programmes".
On top of the fine, ITV has donated £7.8m to charity, bringing its total
costs to nearly £13.5m, not to mention the damage to its reputation. If ITV
had not acted of its own accord to repair its wrongs, Ofcom made it clear
the fine would have been larger.
Michael Grade, executive chairman of ITV plc, yesterday reiterated an
"unreserved apology" to the public, first issued in October 2007, when the
independent auditor Deloitte and Touche published its own report into the
phone-in scandal.
Mr Grade admitted: "For anyone who cares about British broadcasting the
Ofcom findings and the Deloitte review make for sorry reading. It is clear
these serious breaches of trust were evidence of gross editorial errors of
judgement designed, mistakenly, to enhance the viewer experience."
In ITV's defence, he added: "In no case is there evidence that there were
any corrupt attempts to generate further revenues," and insisted the
broadcaster had "totally re-engineered" its editorial and training
procedures to ensure the mistakes are never repeated.
To understand the whole murky business, it is necessary to go back to March
2007, when press reports first started to emerge suggesting that television
phone-in competitions were routinely cheating viewers out of money. ITV
immediately suspended the use of lucrative premium rate interactive services
(PRS) and brought in Deloitte to carry out a review of the use of PRS in its
programmes.
ITV may have been the worst offender but it was not alone. In June last
year, channel Five was fined £300,000 by Ofcom for faking the winners of a
phone-in quiz on its daytime show Brainteaser.
Channel 4 was also forced to abandon PRS when it emerged that viewers had
not been given a fair chance on Richard and Judy's "You Say We Pay"
competition and on Deal or No Deal, presented by Noel Edmonds.
Ofcom imposed a £1.5m fine on Channel 4, while the premium rate phone line
regulator Icstis imposed penalties of £150,000 and £30,000 respectively on
phone operators Eckoh and iTouch. The breakfast television company GMTV was
also fined £2m by Ofcom and a record £250,000 by Icstis over phone-in
competitions which 18 million viewers entered with little or no chance of
winning.
Even that bastion of BBC values, Blue Peter, was fined £50,000 by Ofcom for
allowing a child guest in the studio to pose as a caller in a phone-in
competition when technical problems prevented real callers getting through.
In a series of damning judgements, Ofcom laid bare practices that went on at
ITV companies LWT and Granada between 2003 and 2007.
The £5.675m fine comprises a £3m fine for Takeaway; £1.2m for Gameshow
Marathon; £1.2m for Soapstar Superstar and £275,000 relating to phone-in
competitions on the digital channel ITV2.
Other ITV1 shows including I'm A Celebrity... Get Me Out Of Here! and
People's Court and the now-defunct digital station ITV Play were also found
to be in breach of Ofcom's code, but no sanction was imposed.
"Jiggy Bank" was one of the highlights of Takeaway, a competition in which
viewers were invited to text the show, at the cost of £1 plus three standard
rate SMS messages, for the chance to ride a giant piggy bank to dislodge and
win as many of the 5,000 £1 coins inside.
According to the terms and conditions, a shortlist would be selected at
random and contacted by members of the production team to ensure they met
the health and safety criteria, before an eventual winner was chosen, again
at random.
In reality, the producers had already predetermined the geographical
locations that would be visited by the giant piggy bank each week. A
shortlist was then drawn up of 20 to 30 individuals who lived within
approximately one hour's drive of that location.
Researchers would telephone each individual, not merely to assess their age
and physical fitness, but also to judge whether they would be suitably
lively on camera. In one episode, a winner who was already known to the
production team was chosen because they were considered "bubbly", while on
another occasion a winner was chosen even before viewers were asked to text
in for the chance to take part.
Similar problems occurred on two other competitions on the show – "Grab the
Ads" and "Win the Ads". In Grab the Ads, viewers answered a multiple-choice
question on screen for the chance to win items advertised in the commercial
breaks in a programme from the previous week.
But the callers were not operating on a level playing field. Later entrants
to the competition had a lesser chance of being selected. A shortlist was
drawn up by an external contractor, who was supposed to check that callers
were not drunk or abusive but who, in fact, judged whether entrants were
"articulate and would be likely to be lively if they were put through to the
studio". The contractor also took account of geographical location to
prevent winners being repeatedly selected from the same part of the country.
Win the Ads followed a similar policy, in which members of the production
team telephoned potential entrants in "a form of audition, involving
'editorial judgement', which had been contrary to the terms and conditions
of the competition", said Ofcom.
On Ant and Dec's 2005 series Gameshow Marathon, made by LWT, viewers were
invited to phone or text to enter "Prize Mountain", a competition in which
Les Dennis delivered the prizes in a large lorry. Again, the programme
promised winners would be selected at random but the production team in fact
screened voice messages for entrants who sounded lively and lived close
enough together to be visited at the same time.
More than two million viewers entered the competition in the space of six
weeks and nearly half of those were via text message. But the researcher
responsible for selecting the winners could not even remember how the SMS
entries had been vetted or if if they had been vetted at all.
Over at fellow ITV company Granada, the producers of Soapstar Superstar
showed a similar disregard for viewers. In one show, on 5 January 2007,
presenter Zoë Ball was still urging viewers to call in to vote for their
favourite singer after the phone lines had closed. When the votes were
announced, the contestants in ninth and tenth place should have been put
forward for an overnight eviction vote but, instead, producers chose to put
forward the contestants in seventh and eighth place.
The production team also overrode viewers' votes for songs performed by the
contestants, and when junior members of the team voiced concerns, ITV
admitted they were "firmly sat upon" by senior producers.
In all cases, Ofcom identified the executive producers of the programmes as
the main culprits but the watchdog noted that "no significant disciplinary
action had been taken against any ITV or LWT employee".
Mr Grade has promised ITV will never stoop to such depths again. If the
public's trust in television is to be restored – and if Ant and Dec are to
recapture their popular appeal – he must prove true to his word.