The BBC releases a documentary with a bias against a certain topic?
Never heard of that before
The funny thing about us Brits is, we've been groomed by our media for a couple of decades now to despise paedophillia in all its forms. It's a horrible subject and traumatising for those that have been victims of child molesters, but the scapegoating, the fearmongering against the people with this psychological disorder is so extreme it's at that point where we actively demonise the subject at even the mere mention of it, and are quick to demand the person in question be hanged (despite hanging being outlawed in 1964) even if the person in question has only been accused of it. The problem is, the subject is so taboo here that we don't even
talk about it or try to understand why it happens. Instead we quickly shut it down and demand the person be killed. That's just sweeping the problem under the rug and that won't make it go away. The same people also think that
everyone who reads loli/shota hentai manga is a paedophile, forgetting that the characters depicted aren't real and nobody was harmed in the depiction, unlike actual CP where real children are being abused. That's why I think it's laughable that it's considered CP here. I feel she wasn't qualified to do this interview, she was a classic case.
It's also why I'm not surprised the BBC condemned the author of a show because it had seemingly underage fictional characters since it's one of the media outlets that's been spearheading the fearmongering campaign against paedophiles over the years. Despite hypocritically harbouring a few themselves.
*cough*