The show, I
Am Jazz, was scheduled to start tonight at 20:55 on TLC Entertainment run by
Discovery Networks International (DNI) on MultiChoice's DStv satellite pay-TV
platform but has suddenly been dumped and replaced with another show without any
programming advisory or explanation why.
The abrupt removal of I Am Jazz follows after Nigeria’s broadcasting regulator, the
National Broadcasting Commission (NBC), over the past weekend said it is going
to investigate MultiChoice and TLC Entertainment over the transgender teen show
and whether "the programme is indeed promoting undesirable ideas that will
offend the Nigerian public".
It's the latest skirmish on the continent in
the long-running and sensitive issue of what TV programming is deemed "acceptable" or not for viewers to see.
Broadcasters and pay-TV operators in several African
countries constantly battle myopic broadcasting regulators and are treading a
fine line of what they can, and feel they can, show or not show.
The dumping of I Am Jazz a day before it was to air, however marks the first time
that the threat of censorship of Nigerian television is directly impacting on
pay-TV across the African continent and not just one country.
South Africa, where viewers are more
liberally minded, and several other African countries carrying DNI’s TLC
Entertainment channel are now kept from seeing I Am Jazz after some Nigerians complained about a show they haven't
seen yet.
Ironically conservative Nigerians – who have seen
much more risque TV fare recently than the now canned emotional journey of a transgendered
teen – haven't complained about any of those shows.
Nigerians just weeks ago saw a penis flash in
The Affair on M-Net Edge, are
watching the transgendered drama series Transparent
and Masters of Sex currently on the
same channel, watched the transgendered reality show I am Cait on E! Entertainment which just got renewed for a second
season, and are seeing a litany of other shows across several pay-TV channels containing
nudity, violence and strong language which didn't see any of those shows pulled
either during their run or before they were set to start.
TLC Entertainment promoted I Am Jazz as "fascinating", with Variety describing the show following
the 15-year old South Florida teen Jazz Jennings who was born a boy but is
living as a girl after being diagnosed with gender dysphoria, as "a sensitively
constructed series".
Pulled off the
schedule
Late yesterday MultiChoice in Nigeria said in
a terse statement that "after careful consideration and wide consultation from
various stakeholders, MultiChoice informs its esteemed subscribers that the
mini-series I Am Jazz has been pulled
off the schedule".
The show is however now in fact off the air
not just in Nigeria but across Africa, including South Africa where TLC
Entertainment's schedule and programme guide no longer shows it, but instead Little and Looking for Love.
Discovery Networks hasn't responded with
answers to a media enquiry made Monday morning asking whether the broadcast of I Am Jazz will go forward and seeking
comment on the issue.
Nigerian
sensitivities
The pulling of I Am Jazz in Nigeria was likely influenced by other factors as well
with MultiChoice Nigeria which has literally come under siege in the West
African country the last few months.
Nigerian DStv subscribers are furious after a
massive price hike in August which led to a court case that was dismissed.
Last week Nigeria's Consumer Protection
Council (CPC) together with police and a warrant stormed MultiChoice Nigeria's
headquarters in Lagos and raided the offices, taking computers and DStv
subscriber information.
The CPC in a statement said the raid follows "a
barrage of consumer complaints" including "poor quality of service such as
incessant disruption of service without compensation, wrongful disconnection,
decoder swap irregularities and poor customer service".
It's likely that the pay-TV operator wanted
to avoid yet another additional programming issue with Nigerian authorities on
top of recent problems.