Baadasss TV explained

Baadasss TV is a British television series, devoted to youth-oriented fashion and culture, which aired on Channel 4 in 1994. The series, presented by Andi Oliver and American rapper Ice-T, was "the first British series to explore the wilder side of black culture".[1]

The show was made by the production company Rapido TV, also responsible for Eurotrash and Passengers.[2] It broke the mould of "po-faced" minority programming such as the BBC's Ebony.[3] As well as an appearance of Lee 'Scratch' Perry, the show featured "soft-pornography, rapping dwarves, paintings made from elephant droppings and fitness fanatics Juicy Julia and the Raggaerobics crew".

Some commentators criticised Baadasss TV as a "stereotyped freak show".[3] Trevor Phillips, then a LWT producer, attacked the programme as "just another nigger minstrel show",[4] reinforcing black stereotypes of 'gangsters, pimps, whores and freaks'.[1] However, the show had its defenders. Patrick Younge, producer of the very different 1995 magazine show Black Britain, argued that the real problem was a broader lack of television aimed at black audiences:

In 1996 Baadasss TV was "taken off the air for its lack of political correctness".[1]

Notes and References

  1. Book: Raymond Enisuoh. Alison Donnell. Alison Donnell. Companion to Contemporary Black British Culture. https://books.google.com/books?id=VfdpdZ9DwH0C&pg=PA23. 2002. Routledge. 978-1-134-70025-7. 23. Baadass TV.
  2. Web site: Bad Taste, with a Twist . Richard Morais . . 1 October 1995 . 25 January 2021 .
  3. News: Decca Aitkenhead . Decca Aitkenhead . BBC tries to vault the ghetto walls with black news . . 6 July 1992 . 25 January 2021 .
  4. News: Ice-T . Stewart Lee . Stewart Lee . . 26 May 1995 . 25 January 2021 .