A leaked transcript has revealed two male BBC journalists joking about the corporation's gender pay gap just days after a female journalist resigned over the company's culture of pay inequality.
SEE ALSO: BBC journalist quits after discovering she earns 50% less than male counterpartsCarrie Gracie,Punjabi Archives the BBC's China editor, resigned in an open letter after she found out she earned 50 percent less than her male counterparts.
"With great regret, I have left my post as China Editor to speak out publicly on a crisis of trust at the BBC," wroteGracie, who's been at the BBC for three decades.
"I believe you have a right to know that it [the BBC] is breaking equality law and resisting pressure for a fair and transparent pay structure," Gracie continues.
But, just days after Gracie outed the publicly-funded organisation's "secretive and illegal" pay gap, two male BBC journalists joked about Gracie's story in an off-air conversation leaked to The Sun.
John Humphrys—who's been a presenter on BBC Radio 4 Today programme for 30 years—was talking to the BBC’s North America editor Jon Sopel on the phone ahead of an interview about Gracie's pay equality protest.
Gracie resigned when she discovered her male counterparts were earning more than double her £135,000 per annum salary; one of whom was Sopel, who earns between £200,000-£249,999.
"Slight change of subject, the first question will be how much of your salary you are prepared to hand over to Carrie Gracie to keep her, and then a few comments about your other colleagues, you know, like our Middle East editor [Jeremy Bowen] and the other men who are earning too much," said Humphrys.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
"I mean, obviously if we are talking about the scope for the greatest redistribution I’ll have to come back and say well yes Mr Humphrys, but..." replied Sopel.
"And I could save you the trouble as I could volunteer that I’ve handed over already more than you fucking earn but I’m still left with more than anybody else and that seems to me to be entirely just – something like that would do it?" said Humphrys, who earns a salary of £600,000-£649,000.
"Oh dear god. She’s actually suggested that you should lose money – you know that don’t you? You’ve read the thing properly, have you?" Humphrys adds.
A spokesperson for the BBC said the conversation was "an ill-advised off-air conversation which the presenter regrets." A BBC source revealed to The Guardian, however, that the corporation's management are "deeply unimpressed" by the conversation.
Humphrys defended his remarks to The Sun, stating it was "silly banter between old mates," and later toldThe Timesthat he and Sopel were "taking the mickey out of each other." He added that it "had nothing to do with Carrie's campaign."
People took to Twitter to express their disgust at Humphrys' remarks, which some felt were not out of character.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Over to you, BBC.
Robert Scoble doesn't know what sexual harassment isiPhone X price guide: Apple versus AT&T, Verizon, TThe best scary podcasts to fill your October with Halloween horrorThe Interior Department left out 'climate change' from its new missionOdd Future's Earl Sweatshirt to release his own clothing line, DeathworldDolly Parton read the UK a bedtime story and she's now a national hero'Stranger Things 2' is up on Netflix and there have been some strong Twitter reactionsNothing says 'love' like a pair of custom sneakers with your S.O.'s face on them'The Walking Dead' Season 8 premiere introduced SiddiqUber now lets you add multiple stops to your tripFixing an iPhone X's screen will cost $279 without AppleCare+Olivia Coleman is the new Queen Elizabeth II on 'The Crown''Simpsons' fans notice Milhouse watching an NBA gameGoodbye, Reddit NazisSnapchat and Netflix launch 'Stranger Things' AR experience and filterHands on Epson and DJI's drone Augmented Reality Flight SimulatorHow refugee parents use Facebook and WhatsApp to teach kids new skillsElon Musk is in a Twitter feud with an AI botYour handy guide to how long you can wait to respond to that emailIt's important to know what kind of boss you should work for Best air purifier deal: Get a Honeywell air purifier for $100 off Too Many Books! We‘re in an Era of Overproduction Watch: Nabokov Shows Off His Many Editions of “Lolita” How 'Concrete Park' creator Erika Alexander pushed for representation in sci Can People Write from the Perspective of Animals? Make 2022 the year of no expectations Derrida’s Teacher Calls His Writing “Quite Incomprehensible” Microsoft Surface event: Everything we're expecting to see Meta Verified for business will cost $965 less per month than X's business verification Put a smart ring on it: Why 2022 is prime time for finger wearables Norway Will Cease FM Radio Broadcasts in 2017 How Have We Depicted Madness Throughout History? On the Pleasures of Escaping Yourself Photos from Our 2015 Spring Revel iPhone 15's battery health feature will keep it alive longer Literary Feuds: John Irving and J. P. Donleavy Blue Apron helps you overcome kitchen fatigue while saving you time and effort Creators take TikTok Live to the next (terrifying) level Farewell to Meat: At Masopust, the Czech Festival of Spring Trollope’s “Doctor Thorne” Adapted By “Downton” Creator
2.5549s , 8225.734375 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Punjabi Archives】,Co-creation Information Network