The Japan Times - 'Shocking' UK reality TV show retraces refugee journeys

EUR -
AED 3.789146
AFN 76.78863
ALL 98.648385
AMD 414.037743
ANG 1.867761
AOA 942.417144
ARS 1094.18644
AUD 1.647108
AWG 1.85955
AZN 1.755726
BAM 1.952206
BBD 2.092448
BDT 126.377335
BGN 1.949096
BHD 0.390681
BIF 3068.051617
BMD 1.031651
BND 1.399623
BOB 7.160817
BRL 5.990276
BSD 1.036292
BTN 90.653105
BWP 14.33461
BYN 3.391556
BYR 20220.353668
BZD 2.081668
CAD 1.478061
CDF 2945.362573
CHF 0.93922
CLF 0.025845
CLP 991.784093
CNY 7.51847
CNH 7.543487
COP 4285.310603
CRC 528.227516
CUC 1.031651
CUP 27.338743
CVE 110.062372
CZK 25.103985
DJF 184.550237
DKK 7.460305
DOP 64.301619
DZD 139.327494
EGP 51.945783
ERN 15.47476
ETB 132.614452
FJD 2.386512
FKP 0.849654
GBP 0.832205
GEL 2.868174
GGP 0.849654
GHS 16.011522
GIP 0.849654
GMD 74.278419
GNF 8959.505258
GTQ 8.013247
GYD 217.250036
HKD 8.037802
HNL 26.412374
HRK 7.613116
HTG 135.550447
HUF 405.681682
IDR 16862.588561
ILS 3.678686
IMP 0.849654
INR 90.567842
IQD 1357.600613
IRR 43432.494515
ISK 146.473806
JEP 0.849654
JMD 163.748534
JOD 0.731854
JPY 156.545811
KES 133.793681
KGS 90.217859
KHR 4163.335164
KMF 491.579585
KPW 928.485742
KRW 1505.477821
KWD 0.318336
KYD 0.86361
KZT 528.457093
LAK 22515.54814
LBP 92804.443984
LKR 308.052865
LRD 206.230323
LSL 19.102831
LTL 3.046196
LVL 0.624035
LYD 5.088632
MAD 10.368811
MDL 19.431226
MGA 4883.010219
MKD 61.416929
MMK 3350.761223
MNT 3505.54918
MOP 8.314493
MRU 41.505587
MUR 48.176304
MVR 15.897792
MWK 1796.99168
MXN 21.24583
MYR 4.581047
MZN 65.933122
NAD 19.102831
NGN 1546.145068
NIO 38.139783
NOK 11.618492
NPR 145.044967
NZD 1.825963
OMR 0.396879
PAB 1.036292
PEN 3.85131
PGK 4.162337
PHP 59.897225
PKR 289.191289
PLN 4.192577
PYG 8173.951488
QAR 3.778444
RON 4.957757
RSD 116.844885
RUB 100.753975
RWF 1461.209865
SAR 3.869183
SBD 8.714161
SCR 15.571785
SDG 620.021932
SEK 11.322449
SGD 1.399367
SHP 0.849654
SLE 23.459561
SLL 21633.199216
SOS 592.309539
SRD 36.216133
STD 21353.08654
SVC 9.068305
SYP 13413.522352
SZL 19.096842
THB 34.961575
TJS 11.342718
TMT 3.621094
TND 3.309607
TOP 2.416226
TRY 37.109342
TTD 7.031056
TWD 33.882403
TZS 2663.3966
UAH 42.952623
UGX 3805.993042
USD 1.031651
UYU 45.077012
UZS 13428.278101
VES 62.346559
VND 26111.079149
VUV 122.479642
WST 2.889475
XAF 654.751581
XAG 0.032389
XAU 0.00036
XCD 2.788088
XDR 0.794837
XOF 654.751581
XPF 119.331742
YER 256.932629
ZAR 19.11164
ZMK 9286.092122
ZMW 28.991625
ZWL 332.191104
  • GSK

    -0.3400

    36.04

    -0.94%

  • RIO

    -0.2400

    61.95

    -0.39%

  • AZN

    -0.3700

    71.99

    -0.51%

  • VOD

    0.1300

    8.57

    +1.52%

  • RBGPF

    67.2100

    67.21

    +100%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0300

    7.42

    -0.4%

  • NGG

    -0.1300

    61.54

    -0.21%

  • BTI

    0.1400

    41.76

    +0.34%

  • RELX

    -0.4100

    49.99

    -0.82%

  • CMSC

    -0.0700

    23.37

    -0.3%

  • SCS

    -0.2200

    11.36

    -1.94%

  • BCC

    -1.8300

    123.28

    -1.48%

  • BP

    0.3100

    32.27

    +0.96%

  • CMSD

    -0.0800

    23.75

    -0.34%

  • JRI

    -0.0200

    12.81

    -0.16%

  • BCE

    -1.3800

    22.14

    -6.23%

'Shocking' UK reality TV show retraces refugee journeys
'Shocking' UK reality TV show retraces refugee journeys / Photo: Ben STANSALL - AFP

'Shocking' UK reality TV show retraces refugee journeys

Britain's newest reality TV show has been slammed as "insensitive", "voyeuristic" and even "nauseating" for recreating with six Britons the often fatal journeys made by thousands of refugees to the UK.

Text size:

Bluntly titled "Go Back to Where You Came From", the part-documentary, part-reality TV show by Channel 4 follows the group of six, who hold strong views both for and against immigration.

They are divided into two teams, with one dropped into one war-ravaged Raqqa in Syria and the other sent to Mogadishu in Somalia.

Over four episodes which launched on February 3, they "experience some of the most perilous parts of the refugee journeys" according to Channel 4 -- although they travel largely in armoured vehicles.

The outspoken views of some participants, as well as the show's format, have been criticised by viewers, charities and some media.

Amnesty International UK called it "deeply disappointing" and "sensational".

Participant and chef Dave Marshall, 35, opens the series standing on the cliffs of Dover, calling for immigrants crossing the Channel to be "blown up".

Moments later, political commentator Chloe Dobbs, 24, says that unless immigration is reined in "Britain will be a hellhole full of people wearing burqas".

In the first episode, the six are taken to markets where they meet families, play football with kids and accompany them as they search through litter for scraps.

At one point, when they visit a bombed-out family home in Raqqa, Marshall and two others are invited to stay the night.

"Very kind of you for offering your house to us," replied Marshall, the irony perhaps lost on him.

"The series explores the varied and sometimes polarised opinions in our society in a fresh way," a series spokesperson said.

In upcoming episodes, both groups undertake "challenges", including a boat crossing and trekking through a Libyan desert. There is no winner of the series though.

- 'Outrageous opinions' -

The reality TV genre "exists and its success depends on actually performing shocking opinions", said Myria Georgiou, media and communications professor at the London School of Economics.

"I'm sure the contestants are competing for that shock element -- who is going to be more extreme in their opinions," Georgiou told AFP.

Dobbs defended it as a "really fun show that lots of people will tune into".

"More so than just some bog-standard, boring documentary," she said.

"Go Back to Where You Came From" is based on a popular Australian series which first ran in the early 2010s.

At around that time, politicians in Australia were campaigning to "stop the boats" of irregular migrants reaching the country.

A decade later, the same catchphrase has been seized upon by politicians opposing asylum seekers crossing the Channel to reach Britain.

The timing of the British version did not surprise Georgiou.

"You have the political leadership, nationally and globally, that have made the most outrageous opinions mainstream," said Georgiou.

"We can see that politics have become entertainment and thus it's no surprise that entertainment has become politics."

Some viewers have praised Channel 4 for giving a rare primetime spot to the hot-button immigration debate, with British charity Refugee Council "welcoming" the show's premise.

"Television shows have huge potential to highlight the human stories behind the headlines," Refugee Council CEO Enver Solomon said.

- 'Humanitarian tragedy' -

In one heavily criticised "challenge", the group get into a dinghy in a simulation of the often fatal Channel crossings.

For Dobbs, who has previously said small boats were made out to be "fun" by some refugees, getting into a flimsy vessel in the middle of the night was a turning point.

"It was that moment for me that it really hit me. Gosh, people must be really desperate to get on these boats," she acknowledged.

However, clips of the simulation sparked outrage across the Channel, with French politician Xavier Bertrand calling for the "nauseating" show to be cancelled.

"Hundreds of people have died in the Channel in recent years. This situation is a humanitarian tragedy, not the subject of a game," Bertrand said on X.

The number of asylum seekers arriving in Britain on small boats after crossing the Channel rose to more than 36,800 in 2024, according to official data.

It was also the deadliest year for migrant crossings, with at least 76 deaths recorded.

According to Dobbs, the show wanted to do something "different".

"Rather than just talking to a migrant about what the boat crossing they did was like, wouldn't it be even better to simulate it and feel all those emotions for yourself?"

"And if it makes it more entertaining and more intriguing for the audience and means that more people tune in, I mean, that's a win-win," Dobbs added.

S.Yamada--JT