Comment by walthamstow

Comment by walthamstow 19 hours ago

50 replies

Hoo boy we have some classics in that category in the UK.

My personal fave is when morning TV host Lorraine Kelly successfully argued she wasn’t hosting as herself but acting a character called Lorraine Kelly, with very favourable tax consequences.

seanhunter 15 hours ago

There was also the famous decision in the Jaffa Cake case where the VAT treatment depended on whether or not a Jaffa cake was a cake or a biscuit https://standrewseconomist.com/2023/12/31/let-them-eat-cake-...

The tribunal decided that Jaffa Cakes were cakes because when they go stale they go hard like a cake whereas a biscuit tends to go soft when it goes stale.

  • ryao 15 hours ago

    I remember hearing about this because the one who wanted it classified as a biscuit proposed the test that determined it was a cake. That is the sole reason I remember this story.

  • walthamstow 14 hours ago

    There’s another one about Walkers taste sensations poppadom snacks. Question was, is it a crisp or not? Can’t remember the outcome

eitally 18 hours ago

This is akin to Fox News arguing in court that it is, in fact, entertainment and not news, despite it's name.

  • thunky 18 hours ago

    It's true though. All cable news is "entertainment news", not "news".

    Nobody should have been getting their "news" from Tucker Carlson, Don Lemon, or Rachel Maddow.

    IMO they shouldn't be allowed to call themselves news without putting entertainment in front.

    • ash_091 9 hours ago

      Absolutely- even as a lifelong leftie, I find the rhetoric on CNBC just as sickening as that on Fox.

      I've (somewhat sardonically) wondered if they're both false flag operations. Imagine CNBC started with the idea "we'll parody the left to make them seem radical and unreasonable" but accidentally developed a huge following who didn't get the joke.

    • dingnuts 16 hours ago

      Thank you for pointing this out. Carlson and Maddow made nearly identical arguments in court and if both are not mentioned in the same breath, the speakers bias is instantly displayed to anyone who is educated on this topic.

      > IMO they shouldn't be allowed to call themselves news without putting entertainment in front.

      Agreed but the average person wouldn't understand that Entertainment News was different than News. The problem goes deeper. I despair.

      • smallmancontrov 15 hours ago

        Carlson's texts were wild, they proved that he knew he was spreading lies and did it anyway for views. That's why Fox settled with Dominion for $787 million dollars.

        Meanwhile, OAN sued Maddow for calling them Russian propaganda and her lawyers responded by flexing, doubling down with receipts under oath. Signing up for consequences if they were wrong, and receiving none because they were correct.

        So no, these are not the same, and anyone who argues that they are immediately reveals themselves to be partisan hacks.

      • 1659447091 13 hours ago

        > the average person wouldn't understand that Entertainment News was different than News

        I think the 'average' person thinks of 'Entertainment News' as celebrity gossip, e.g., E! News[0] etc. Telling them the entertainment news/opinion/commentary they watch is not actually 'News' but is entertainment "news" doesn't compute

        [0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/E!_News

        • Terretta 5 hours ago

          News Entertainment?

          Like WWE is Sports Entertainment.

  • _n_b_ 17 hours ago

    What Fox News argued was a bit more nuanced than that all of Fox News isn't news. Rather, "Fox successfully argued that one particular segment on Tucker Carlson’s show could only be reasonably interpreted as making political arguments, not making factual assertions, and therefore couldn’t be defamation."[1]

    That feels like a fairly reasonable assertion for anybody watching Tucker Carlson.

    [1] https://popehat.substack.com/p/fox-news-v-fox-entertainment-...

    • skrebbel 17 hours ago

      I know nothing about the case but isn't that a little like saying "look, we weren't lying, cause we never said we were saying the truth"?

      • _n_b_ 16 hours ago

        Well, context matters in looking at defamation claims.

        Let's say you were involved in a freak hunting accident and shot somebody, but you were never charged with any crimes.

        If the Fox News "hard news" program (if such a thing exists) said "skrebbel is a murderer" that is more likely to be understood to be a statement of fact, asserting something in a legalistic sense. [IANAL, but I think even this is unlikely to be defamation, although there is a somewhat similar case where ABC settled with Donald Trump over saying he was "liable for rape"]

        If somebody on Tucker Carlson Tonight said "You can't trust anything that skrebbel guy says, he's a murderer!" that is more likely to be understood as an opinion based on disclosed facts, not a fact. That person isn't asserting that you committed or were convicted of a specific crime of murder, but rather that you killed somebody and it might be your fault. On a show were people are arguing and exchanging opinionated views, viewers should understand that these things are opinions. And therefore that's not defamation, because it's an opinion.

        • skrebbel 16 hours ago

          > You can't trust anything that skrebbel guy says, he's a murderer!

          I am deeply offended and contemplating to sue you for defamation.

    • vixen99 13 hours ago

      Political argument, as such, is worthwhile insofar as it can cause me to reexamine my own preconceptions. Facts I can pick up almost anytime.

  • TeMPOraL 13 hours ago

    Isn't it also how, many years ago, Top Gear got away with a hit job on Tesla by claiming they're just an entertainment show, so they're not obligated to do honest or truthful reviews?

Corrado 19 hours ago

I think Steven Colbert hosted a show using himself as the host. I’m not sure about the tax implications though.

  • gwbas1c 18 hours ago

    And then when he tried using the "Steven Colbert" character on a different show, Comedy Central threatened him because Steven Colbert does not have rights to the "Steven Colbert" character.

    • kjs3 16 hours ago

      Al Shugart started Shugart Associates and pretty much created the 5 1/4" floppy market. He sold to Xerox. He later started Shugart Technology and was promptly threatened with a lawsuit because he literally had sold his rights to his own name (in the particular context). He changed the name to Seagate Technology and the rest is history.

      Yes, you can be enjoined from using your own name.

      • gwbas1c 16 hours ago

        > Yes, you can be enjoined from using your own name.

        This is not that case.

        In popular media when "The Colbert Report" was broadcast, Steven Colbert was very open about the fact that he was playing a character on TV who happened to have the same name as him.

        In the case of "The Tonight Show featuring Steven Colbert," he is not playing the character from the Colbert Report.

        The very specific bit was from after the 2017 election when Trump was elected. Steven Colbert did a bit, in character as "Steven Colbert", with props from "The Colbert Report", and a guest appearance from Jon Stewart. (Because the main focus of "The Colbert Report" was to mock conservatives.) Otherwise, everything Steven Colbert (the person) does on "The Tonight Show featuring Steven Colbert" does not involve the "Steven Colbert" character from "The Colbert Report."

    • bloomingkales 16 hours ago

      That doesn’t seem like that should be possible. He sold his identity for life? Hollywood really does ask for your soul huh.

      It would make sense why he’s never even jokingly gone back into that character on his new show.

      • ipaddr 14 hours ago

        And others can take your identity. If you happen to have the name Michael Jordan try putting out your own running shoes under your name.

      • treis 16 hours ago

        It's not his identity, though. It's a character that he plays.

  • technothrasher 19 hours ago

    I'm pretty sure that was Chuck Noblet pretending to be Steven Colbert.

  • DFHippie 18 hours ago

    If there were any tax implications, they were incidental. The show was parody, so the opinions he espoused in character were necessarily ones he didn't actually hold.

panzi 17 hours ago

I'm not from the UK, but wasn't there also a cake Vs biscuits thing for tax reasons?

  • seabass-labrax 17 hours ago

    Yes, Jaffa Cakes - minature sponge cakes flavoured with Jaffa oranges. Cakes aren't subject to Value Added Tax in the UK, which allows them to be sold more cheaply to the consumer or have a greater profit margin. A tribunal confirmed that they are true, real and genuine cakes, so you may feel entitled to enjoy your tax-free treat!

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/newsbysector/retailandco...

    • panzi 8 hours ago

      It's wild to me that anything you can buy in a store, especially something frivolous like cake, might be tax free.

      • seabass-labrax 3 hours ago

        In a way it's not completely tax-free; the embodied costs of producing and selling the cake are still taxed with employee income tax, National Insurance, import duties and so on.

        The UK's exemption from VAT covers lots of things, but not an entirely logical selection: cakes are considered staples and are exempt, but drinks (including soft drinks, beer and mineral water) are taxed at the full 20% rate.

        In general, I would personally prefer that the UK not have VAT, as it's a regressive tax (people with lower incomes pay a greater percentage of their income on it than high earners do).

  • JBiserkov 17 hours ago

    And windows being covered with bricks for tax reasons.

immibis 18 hours ago

Alex Jones argued this, with the obvious implication, that whoever buys Infowars also owns the character of Alex Jones, and Alex Jones cannot play Alex Jones any more without infringing their copyright. (But I suspect this incoming government doesn't care to apply logical consistency to his case)

FireBeyond 12 hours ago

I had a friend that argued that Marshall Mathers (Eminem) could never actually be sued for defamation because most of the defamatory things "he" said wasn't actually him saying it, but Slim Shady.

Hah.