Episode Description
In this follow-up special, Cath Leng is joined by barrister and Gay Men’s Network director Dennis Kavanagh for a frank, forensic look at what the BBC’s institutional capture by gender-identity activism has meant for lesbians, gay men, and children who would otherwise have grown up LGB.
This isn’t just about editorial misjudgement - it’s about a decade of decisions that shaped public understanding, erased lesbian and gay perspectives, and failed to interrogate an ideology that was transforming safeguarding, healthcare, children’s media, and the law.
Together, Cath and Dennis dig into:
* How “forced teaming” of LGB with TQ+ at the BBC led to routine erasure of same-sex attraction
* The missing stories: whistleblowers, the puberty blocker trial, Allison Bailey, homophobic parental pressure - all rejected or downplayed
* Lesbian invisibility: from suppressed profiles to the treatment of lesbian interveners in the Supreme Court
* Why BBC Pride became a gatekeeper for one side of a highly contested political debate
* The homophobia baked into entertainment formats such as I Kissed a Boy - and why the BBC defended them
* Political orthodoxy vs journalism: how the broadcaster abandoned scrutiny just when it was needed most
* The consequences for young people - particularly gender-nonconforming kids who might simply have grown up gay
* Why this matters now: the government’s proposed puberty-blockers trial, possible conversion-therapy legislation, and the need for urgent, reality-based reporting
* What comes next — and why restoring trust requires more than quietly dropping “affirmative” content. It requires walking it back, openly.
Dennis speaks powerfully about the impact of a decade in which gay men and lesbians were told - implicitly and explicitly —-that their boundaries, their language, even their sexual orientation were offensive. And both he and Cath reflect on how the BBC can only move forward by acknowledging what went wrong, not rewriting history as if this were a mere “historic” glitch.
If you’ve been following the unfolding story, this episode helps you see the missing half: the impact on the LGB community - and the young people who should have been protected.
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