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BBC to play ‘distasteful’ song after Thatcher death

Published: 13 Apr 2013 - 03:54 am | Last Updated: 02 Feb 2022 - 10:39 am

LONDON: Britain’s public broadcaster has refused to ban the song “Ding Dong! The Witch Is Dead” after anti-Margaret Thatcher campaigners sent it soaring into the charts following the death of the former prime minister.

The BBC said it would only play a clip of the 74-year-old song as part of a “news item” on its weekly Radio 1 chart show after the campaign pushed it into the UK top 10 list to “celebrate” Thatcher’s death.

The BBC, politicians of all stripes and some members of the public called the song campaign “distasteful”. Many asked for the track from the 1939 film The Wizard of Oz to be banned.

By yesterday Ding Dong was ranked second in the week’s singles chart after selling 20,000 copies and could reach the No. 1 slot by tomorrow, according to a spokeswoman from Britain’s Official Charts company.

The debate was seen as a critical test for the new head of the BBC, Tony Hall, appointed after a sex scandal involving the late TV presenter Jimmy Savile threw the broadcaster into turmoil and raised questions about the organisation’s ethics.

After days of silence, the BBC said in a statement yesterday that it would play a clip of the song tomorrow. “The BBC finds this campaign distasteful but does not believe the record should be banned,” the BBC said.

“On Sunday, the Radio 1 Chart Show will contain a news item explaining why the song is in the charts during which a short clip will be played as it has been in some of our news programmes.”

Reuters