Piers Morgan’s Good Morning Britain ‘gay cure’ chat tops Ofcom complaints
An episode of Good Morning Britain in which Piers Morgan interviewed a āgay cureā therapist was the most complained about TV segment of 2017.
The show aired a discussion between host Piers Morgan, Liverpool Echo journalist Josh Parry and ātherapistā Dr Michael Davidson on 5 September
The episode went on to receive some 1142 complaints, more than any other programme.
Viewers were quick to slam the item, asking ITV bosses why a man who claims he can ācureā homosexuality, which is not possible, was given the platform.
Gay conversion therapy: @piersmorgan and @susannareid100 challenge Dr Michael Davidsonās views on homosexuality pic.twitter.com/qZxmLMgZRz
ā Good Morning Britain (@GMB) September 5, 2017
During the segment host Piers Morgan laid into the idea that being gay was an invention which could be turned on and off.
Dr. Davidson rebutted the brash TV host as he suggested a āpopulation group are unhappy with homosexualityā ā to which Piers pointed out he meant himself.
The 52 year old, who has previously been criticised for his views on non-binary people, began: āYou know what we call these people? We call them horrible little bigots in the modern world.
āBigoted people who talk complete claptrap and, in my view, a malevolent and dangerous part of our society.
āWhatās the matter with you? Stop talking for a moment. Stop banging on.ā
āYou seem to care very much, you seem to think he wasnāt born gay and now needs to be cured.
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āTo which I say, shut up you old bigot! Sorry, but this is ridiculous.ā
After viewers said Dr Davidson should not have been given a platform for his views in the first place, ITV responded: āShould offensive views not be aired even if challenged?ā
Stonewall Chief Exec Ruth Hunt wrote said at the time: āIām increasingly thinking that @stonewalluk needs an early morning crew just to respond and counteract early morning ITV sanctioned hateā.
Gay cure therapy has been widely and conclusively debunked by experts ā it is not possible to forcefully change a personās sexuality.
Despite this, the practice remains broadly legal in the UK, with a Liverpool church being exposed as telling gay people they could be ācuredā by starvation just weeks ago.
It is banned on the NHS, and any professional who is a member of the General Medical Council found to offer gay cure therapy would be struck off.