BBC’s New Anti-White Initiative Not Good Enough for Lenny Henry

Sven Longshanks
Daily Stormer
June 26, 2014

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BBC Director-General Tony Hall waves his award for treason to the White race.

The BBC’s latest initiative to ban White people from filling one in seven positions on air and just give £2Million to Blacks before they have even filmed anything, has been condemned by Lenny Henry as not being good enough.

Even the BBC Director General’s plan to ‘fast track’ shows which contain no White people whatsoever has been rejected by him. Instead, he is demanding changes in the law to ensure White people are not employed and Blacks get the jobs instead.

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Lenny Henry, expert at being Black.

Express:

Actor and comedian Lenny Henry yesterday slammed the BBC’s £2.1million plan to foster ethnic talent.

The corporation’s director-general Tony Hall announced a new “diversity creative talent fund” last week to help “fast track” shows by minorities.

But referring to 12 Years A Slave star Chiwetel Ejiofor and Idris Elba, from TV crime drama Luther, Mr Henry said: “They didn’t need more training, they just needed a break.”

Earlier this year, he complained that the number of ethnic workers in ­British TV had plunged by a third between 2006 and 2012 to just 5.4 per cent of the broadcast workforce.

He called for new laws and targets to reverse that decline.

“There is initiative fatigue. People have lost hope and don’t believe that one more initiative will achieve true diversity. Things are being done but they’re not really working.”

Mr Henry called for money to be earmarked specifically for ethnic minority productions and for the number of on-screen and production staff from minority groups to increase across all broadcasters.

Patrick Younge, director of We­Create Associates and former chief creative officer of BBC TV Production, told the committee that Mr Hall’s scheme was “well-intentioned” but was addressing the wrong part of the problem.

He said the £2.1million was “tiny” and added: “It’s three episodes of Luther in terms of on-air spend.”

A BBC spokesman insisted later: “Last week we set out far-reaching plans that we believe will make a tangible difference. We will work hard to deliver them.”

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Patrick Younge, director of We­Create Associates backed Lenny Henry in condemning the BBC as still not doing enough for them. Why the BBC should be doing anything for them at all has still not actually been made clear.