XPost: uk.politics.misc, uk.tv, uk.legal
XPost: alt.politics
From: harry130747@btinternet.com
"Andy Wainwright" wrote in message
news:l4c2lj$402$1@dont-email.me...
> Whilst I've never watched a whole episode of this show, a few seasons back
> they brought in this wonderful "Judges Houses" thing. The idea was,
> contestants would jet off to some exotic bling-filled chav pad to be
> mentored by the judges.
>
> Little problem here. One had a house in Florida, one in Dubai.
>
> Some people are not covered by the US visa waiver scheme (I'm one myself)
> . If I want to fly to the USA I need to apply a year or so in advance and
> sometimes appeal if not intially successful. This is despite having no
> serious criminal record or involvement in terrorism, simply having a
> breakdown and at that time needed to be datined for my own and others'
> safety.
>
> A common conviction (I don't have this) is one for soft drug possesion,
> perhaps half and ounce of weed or something. Whilst UK courts will
> generally give a slap on the wrist for this, it's something the US
> immigration authorities take a dim view of. Shoplifting as a teenager can
> cause similar problems on this front, again even if no custodial sentence
> was imposed. Whilst it's not behaviour I'd condone, it's something a
> sizeable minority of children have done.
>
> On on to Dubai- now there's a can of worms if every there was one. For
> example, there was a serious (!!) suggestion to bring in a facial
> recognition system to "spot" gays. Obviously pretty damn silly, but if you
> were amongst the LGBT community, it's not a place you'd want to go- in
> fact it could be very dangerous for you.
>
> Foreign travel at all is going to stop refugees- it can take up to five
> years to get the required documents for this.
>
> Of course, if you actually did have a concrete recording contract with a
> major record company, whilst these would be obstacles, a good legal team
> could clear them. But the contestants haven't actually won, so they
> haven't got a deal.
>
> So OK, we've taken out the refugees, the mental, the gays, the druggies,
> the petty crooks. In fact a lot of very big stars from the past were in
> one or more of these catagories. Freddie Mercury, Ozzie Ozborne, Amy
> Winehouse, Elvis, Whitney Houston, Elton John- it goes on a bit doesn't
> it...
>
> Now whilst this could be deemed if formal employment illegal
> discrimination on all manner of grounds, because it's a contest it's not
> covered. Yet in ethical terms, discrimination it still very much is.
>
> On pure artistic grounds, most of the initial auditions are carried out by
> TV researchers not say, musicians. This can make a lot of difference- for
> instance a singer will sound crap with the wrong material and the wrong
> key however actually talented they might be. In addition, standards are a
> lot higher for the less visually aesthetic, and if you're a songwriter
> they're rarely interested, so you can forget your Bob Dylans and so forth.
>
> If shows like this were just a drop in the popular musical ocean, it
> wouldn't be much to worry about. Unfortunately, this sort of show has
> become one of the few ways talent can break these days. With the focus on
> these "talent" contests, it's shifted away from the local live music
> venues. It seems that the A&R men and audiences alike are prefering the
> spoon fed diet from the telly as opposed to actually going out and seing
> singers and bands. Perhaps worse of all, it's encouraged non-constructive
> criticism across the board, with it becoming more fashionable to rubbish
> from the sideline than to pick up an instrument and attempt to do
> something better oneself.
>
>
>
Other societies clearly have higher standards than we have.
There's a surprise.
--- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
* Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)
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