The BBC has issued a formal apology after allowing a “high risk” act to perform live at Glastonbury, despite internal warnings about Bob Vylan‘s potential for controversial content. The performance aired on the broadcaster’s platforms and contained what the BBC described as “offensive and deplorable behavior” related to antisemitism.
Director-general Tim Davie personally addressed BBC staff in an internal memo on Thursday, stating: “I deeply regret that such offensive and deplorable behavior appeared on the BBC and want to say sorry – to our audience and to all of you, but in particular to Jewish colleagues and the Jewish community. We are unequivocal that there can be no place for antisemitism at the BBC.”
The incident has prompted significant changes to the BBC’s live streaming protocols for music events. Bob Vylan had been classified as “high risk” following a risk assessment process applied to all Glastonbury acts, with seven performers falling into this category. Despite the classification, all acts were deemed suitable for live streaming with “appropriate mitigations.”
However, the broadcaster acknowledged critical failures in their compliance processes. “Prior to Glastonbury, a decision was taken that compliance risks could be mitigated in real time on the live stream – through the use of language or content warnings – without the need for a delay. This was clearly not the case,” the BBC statement read.
During the performance, the livestream was monitored according to agreed protocols, with warnings appearing twice on the stream. Despite escalated concerns, the editorial team made the decision not to cut the feed – a choice the BBC now acknowledges as “an error.”
Davie, who was on-site at Glastonbury visiting BBC staff, was subsequently informed of the incident and immediately instructed teams to prevent the performance from appearing in any further coverage. While the performance was quickly removed from BBC iPlayer and Sounds, the live feed remained active until shortly after 8 p.m. as teams worked on technical solutions.
BBC chair Samir Shah also issued a statement, apologizing “to all our viewers and listeners and particularly the Jewish community for allowing the ‘artist’ Bob Vylan to express unconscionable antisemitic views live on the BBC.” Shah praised Davie’s swift response and confirmed the BBC board met Tuesday to address the incident.
The controversy has led to immediate policy changes for live music programming. High-risk musical performances will no longer be broadcast or streamed live, editorial policy support will be mandatory on-site at major music festivals, and the broadcaster will provide more detailed guidance on when to withdraw live streams.
The BBC stated it is taking actions “to ensure proper accountability for those found to be responsible for those failings in the live broadcast.”
The incident represents a significant embarrassment for the public broadcaster, with Davie emphasizing its commitment to being “a role model for inclusivity and tolerance” and maintaining “an environment where everyone is supported and can do their very best work.”