Originally Posted by Jim Kowalski:
“For week after week I had to
listen to my mum complaining about that bloomin Ed Balls getting through.
Listen to her bemoaning the departure of someone better.
Listen to her saying her sisters thought the same.
God bless the power of the judges
(or else I was going to buy some noise-cancelling headphones)”
Then Jim write to the BBC and demand they remove the public vote.
If it remains it has to conform to BBC Editorial Guidelines and Ofcom regulations, which it presently does not.
The Guidelines state every entry must have a fair chance of winning. This system does not do that.
Ofcom regulations say the BBC must
ENSURE the public are not misled. It has become clear that most people on this forum were unware of the massive bias. The BBC were even on written record as saying it was impossible for the public favourite to ever be thrown off the show. So the BBC were even misleading themselves.
However, worst of all the presenters in 2015 and the celebs in 2016 have been misleading viewers saying no one is safe. That is misleading as in most weeks some couples can get ZERO public votes and will only appear in the dance off in a miniscule number of situations when they get zero public votes.
At the start of this year in response to James Jordan (I think) the BBC claimed the public choose the winner (or something on that line) but failed to say the judges predominantly choose who they will allow the public to choose their winner from, potentially kicking out public favourites up to that point.
Similar things have happened in Eurovision. Allegedly the 2015 winner of that show was presented to UK audiences by the BBC as 'Your winner', when he was not. The landslide winner that year (Italy) in a vote of millions was relegated to 3rd by just 200 jury members. For two years the public favourite, two really good songs, were incapable of getting better that 3rd in the official contest, because 200 jury members had made it literally impossible for most songs to have any credible chance of winning the contest
prior to the public vote.
If the BBC want to run these systems they need to start telling the public about the massive bias in these votes so it is clear to everyone and not just mathematicians. The public need to know when songs or couples face almost impossible odds, even when they are getting massive public support.
That is why Ofcom regulations exist.