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Television series From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Kilroy was a BBC One daytime chat show hosted by Robert Kilroy-Silk that began on 24 November 1986 and finished on 29 January 2004 after 17 years. Originally called Day to Day, the programme was renamed to Kilroy in September 1987.
Kilroy | |
---|---|
Genre | Chat Show |
Starring | Robert Kilroy-Silk |
Country of origin | United Kingdom |
Original language | English |
Production | |
Running time | 60 minutes |
Original release | |
Network | BBC One |
Release | 24 November 1986 – 29 January 2004 |
The format featured the host moving among an audience made up of experts and members of the public, speaking to them one by one on a different topical or moral issue per episode.
Series | Start date | End date | Episodes |
---|---|---|---|
1 | 24 November 1986 | ||
2 | 12 October 1987 | ||
3 | 17 October 1988 | ||
4 | 16 October 1989 | ||
5 | 15 October 1990 | ||
6 | 14 October 1991 | ||
7 | 12 October 1992 | ||
8 | 11 October 1993 | ||
9 | 19 September 1994 | ||
10 | 16 October 1995 | ||
11 | 2 September 1996 | ||
12 | 1 September 1997 | ||
13 | 7 September 1998 | ||
14 | 6 September 1999 | ||
15 | 4 September 2000 | ||
16 | 3 September 2001 | ||
17 | 2 September 2002 | ||
18 | 1 September 2003 | ||
The show was taken off the air in 2004 after Kilroy made allegedly racist remarks. Kilroy questioned what contribution Arabs have made to civilisation beyond oil.[1] He stated other views that made matters worse. He ridiculed Scots, the Irish, the Iraqis, Black people, Pakistanis, the French and Germans.[2] The Commission for Racial Equality reported him to the police.[3]
The BBC cancelled the show, stating that his views were a threat to the network's impartiality. Kilroy claimed afterwards on the BBC's Question Time that he had been under a six-month investigation when this happened. He stated that his show was cancelled because he was anti-religion, rather than racist.[4] However panelist Shappi Khorsandi claimed that his views were about Arabs as a people rather than their religion. Kilroy had previously claimed to have apologised in 2004. It was rejected primarily because Kilroy himself twisted his words. Iqbal Sacranie (secretary-general of the Muslim Council of Britain) claimed that Kilroy had not retracted his views but skimmed over the apology and changed a few words.[5]
The programme was replaced by Now You're Talking!, which followed a similar format and was presented by Nicky Campbell and Nadia Sawalha. The show was also produced by Kilroy-Silk's production company.[6]
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