(25 Mar 2015, 5:20 pm)mb134 wrote Did anyone else watch Free Speech on BBC three last night?
They had 3 pretty respectable men then had Luisa Zissman?! This isn't meant to be sexist, and I'm not saying that there shouldn't have been a woman on the panel, it's just is anyone going to take genuine political views from an ex-Big Brother contestant?
(25 Mar 2015, 5:22 pm)MarcTheA4 wrote
Pfft, no!
(26 Mar 2015, 9:03 pm)MurdnunoC wrote Straight out the gate...lol.Paxman ruined him. He also got Cameron to admit that he couldn't live on a zero hour contract, so it makes you wonder why he's happy for employers to allow others to!
People only started to use food-banks because Labour didn't allow Jobcentres to advertise them - says Cameron.
(26 Mar 2015, 11:22 pm)aureolin wrote Paxman ruined him. He also got Cameron to admit that he couldn't live on a zero hour contract, so it makes you wonder why he's happy for employers to allow others to!
I've not watched it all, but I hear that Paxman absolutely destroyed Milliband.
(26 Mar 2015, 11:29 pm)MurdnunoC wrote He came across as he well as he could considering it was Ed Miliband facing Jeremy Paxman. I think Cameron came across worse although he recovered slightly when facing the audience.Hopefully it's on 4OD, so I can listen to it in work tomorrow. Looking at twitter, the response on Ed is actually a lot better than what id initially been told.
(26 Mar 2015, 11:32 pm)aureolin wrote Hopefully it's on 4OD, so I can listen to it in work tomorrow. Looking at twitter, the response on Ed is actually a lot better than what id initially been told.
(27 Mar 2015, 6:36 pm)aureolin wrote Kay Burley really is a hideous woman. Sniping at everything Milliband came out with, and even dared to state he gave a politicians answer. I actually think he's come across really sincere with his answers, and has been brutally honest with them. Cameron had spent the previous 45 giving politician answers, yet she doesn't say a word about that...
(28 Mar 2015, 12:21 pm)MurdnunoC wrote Yeah I got a bit sick of her constantly interrupting when Miliband was speaking while fawning in admiration when Cameron was taking questions.
I think Paxman's treatment of Miliband was fair. I don't think many have a problem with what Miliband says but rather how he comes across. He's not statesman-like which does draw concerns both from the public and within in his own party, but, then again, maybe people are sick of slickly-produced politicians who are immersed in the art of public relations.
(28 Mar 2015, 6:12 pm)mb134 wrote I felt Miliband gave better answers than Cameron did, but I think it would have been better to make it so that both faced Paxman before they faced the public, rather than the way Miliband did it.
Looking forward to the actual debates
(28 Mar 2015, 6:38 pm)aureolin wrote Aye, the bias was certainly there!
Paxman is Paxman. Everyone knows what to expect. Even though he's a Tory, we've seen time and time again that he'll happily give everyone a hard time about anything. I thought Milliband tried to make the point too much at some points, but it was good to see him just admit that things were wrong in the past.
The general public hate non-answers, so I'm assuming they found it refreshing too.
It'd have been better to have them both debating at the same time, and both answering questions at the same time, but Cameron bottled it. It's not hard to see why though, when you look back to the 2010 debates.
The only thing back then that stopped him looking completely hopeless, was the fact that Gordon Brown looked stressed to death, and is perhaps the single reason for Labour failing in 2010.
(28 Mar 2015, 7:07 pm)mb134 wrote We discussed the programme heavily in school on Friday, and most people agreed that Miliband faired a bit better than Cameron did. However, what surprised me, was that even where I live and go to school, people were happy with what the Conservatives have done in the past five years (for us), and they are seemingly oblivious to the fact that for my age group, Labour would probably be the best choice (Uni Fees etc).
I know that Labour did play a big part in the financial problems last time, and credit to Miliband for admitting that, but lets not forget that it happened in most countries and I doubt the Conservatives would have done much better.
(29 Mar 2015, 12:59 pm)mb134 wrote http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-...nough.html
Looks like the programme on Thursday night has paid off a little for Labour.
(29 Mar 2015, 1:52 pm)MurdnunoC wrote With the constant Tory propagation about how they've gotten tough on benefit scrounging and how they've 'fixed' the economy I can understand why some might be happy with what the Tories have done over the past five years. As to whether the Conservatives would have fared any better during the 2008 financial crisis...check Hansard! - Compare what Cameron and Osbourne had to say about the crisis, as it was unfolding, and contrast their views against whatever their mantra is now.Aye I've noticed there seems to be some common trends, the only real reason I look at the Daily Mail to be honest! Some of the articles on there are utter nonsense.
Love reading the comments of Daily Mail readers...It never fails to amuse!
Your answers place you on the left of the political centre in comparison with the overall population in 2014.
You scored 5 out of 25
A score of 5 is the furthest left and 25 is the furthest right. Your answers would place you a long way from the political centre in any year but you would have been closest to the centre of political opinion in 1995 and 1996.
(01 Apr 2015, 12:35 pm)aureolin wrote Martin Freeman starring in Labour's party election broadcast: http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/b05...5-31032015
His other notable film roles include the romantic comedy Love Actually (2003), the comic science fiction film The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy (2005), the semi-improvised comedy Nativity! (2009)...