BBC Accused of Censorship After Blocking Andrew Tate Interview for UK Viewers
The BBC has been accused of trying to cover up an interview with Andrew Tate, which has been blocked for UK-based YouTube users.

The BBC has been accused of trying to cover up an interview with Andrew Tate, which has been blocked for UK-based YouTube users.
In an apparent breach of BBC impartiality rules, a reporter for the public-funded broadcaster embraced Ukrainian President Zelensky in a hug.
The BBC has been revealed to have received hundreds of thousands in ad revenue from Saudi Arabia’s national oil company.
Nigel Farage’s weeknight programme has hit its highest ratings and beat the BBC and the Comcast-owned Sky News combined on Thursday.
The BBC is “institutionally racist” claim a number of unidentified black employees, who said working for the publicly-funded broadcaster is like “being on a plantation”.
Prince Andrew, a member of Britain’s royal family, claimed in a rare interview with BBC that he has “no recollection of ever meeting” the Jeffrey Epstein victim who labeled him as part of an underage sex ring.
“Should anti-abortion campaigners be banned from standing outside abortion centres and urging women to change their mind?” asks BBC News in a five-minute report. Visiting an abortion clinic in London, outside which pro-life activists have “campaigned for years”, Leila Nathoo asks
Viewers of a live BBC newscast were exposed to explicit content when a video of a woman exposing her bare breasts played on a computer screen in the background. The footage made it into the live shot of BBC News at Ten, according to a new video.
In a segment for the BBC’s longstanding Newsnight programme, the British public broadcaster has attempted to paint the hipster-right Identitarian youth movement as nothing more than veiled Neo-Nazis.
Actor and environmental activist Leonardo DiCaprio faces being banned from Indonesia after he criticized the country’s palm oil and paper industries online.
The BBC is a publicly-funded entity run for the lavish benefit of its employees. What else are we to make of the news that the broadcaster spends less than half of its money on programmes for licence fee payers while