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BBC Bans Live Broadcasts of ‘High Risk’ Acts After Glastonbury Performer Chants ‘Death to the IDF’
|By
Matis Glenn1 MIN READ
Published Jul. 3, 2025, 1:03 PM
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The BBC announced Thursday it will stop live-streaming music acts it considers “high risk,” following backlash over punk-rap duo Bob Vylan’s Glastonbury performance, during which the lead singer chanted “Death, death to the IDF.”
The British public broadcaster came under fire for allowing the performance to air uninterrupted, despite the performer’s anti-Israel remarks during the major festival held in southwest England.
UK police said Monday that a criminal investigation is underway into the statements made by the band on stage.
“We fully understand the strength of feeling regarding Bob Vylan’s live appearance at Glastonbury on the BBC,” the BBC said in a statement. “Errors were made both in the lead-up to and during” the performance, it acknowledged.
The broadcaster said it is holding those responsible for the broadcast accountable and is implementing new policies immediately.
“Any music performances deemed high risk will now not be broadcast live or streamed live,” the statement concluded.
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