We need to hear and see people who stutter on TV & radio all year round, not just a day.


We need to hear and see people who stutter on TV & radio all year round, not just a day.
The issue
Imagine growing up in a world where stuttering voices are frequently heard on the TV and radio. Where people who stutter and those who don't are used to hearing stuttering voices and aren't surprised by it.
That won’t happen unless and until all our media embrace the fact that stuttering voices, like different accents, need to be heard on TV and on the radio.
We call upon all of our media channels to ensure that people who stutter are represented in our media spaces.
To commit to ensuring that you have the policies, procedures and messages in place to encourage those who stutter to take a full part in producing and appearing on your programmes. On the news, in soaps, in chat shows, as experts.
All you need to do is actively encourage and platform our voices and allow extra time for us to finish.
Stuttering is how some people talk. It has nothing to do with intelligence or articulacy. Between 50-70 million people around the world stutter, from the President of the USA down. 8% of children will stutter at some point, and between 1-3% of adults say that they stutter.
Stuttering isn’t that unusual, but you wouldn’t know that based on how few people we hear stutter on the radio or television.
Indeed for many, the only time they see people stuttering on TV is Joe Biden, A Fish Called Wanda, The King’s Speech and Open All Hours.
This is unacceptable. It doesn’t reflect the real world where so many people stutter. It makes people who stutter feel isolated and unseen, or even ashamed and feeling the need to hide their stutter. It also means that people who don’t stutter don’t know what to do or how to react when they meet someone who does. This stigma, impacting people from the very start of their lives, affects mental health and career prospects, and results in a real loss of talent on every career path, every industry.
End this and include people who stutter routinely in your programming, because diversity includes disfluency.
The issue
Imagine growing up in a world where stuttering voices are frequently heard on the TV and radio. Where people who stutter and those who don't are used to hearing stuttering voices and aren't surprised by it.
That won’t happen unless and until all our media embrace the fact that stuttering voices, like different accents, need to be heard on TV and on the radio.
We call upon all of our media channels to ensure that people who stutter are represented in our media spaces.
To commit to ensuring that you have the policies, procedures and messages in place to encourage those who stutter to take a full part in producing and appearing on your programmes. On the news, in soaps, in chat shows, as experts.
All you need to do is actively encourage and platform our voices and allow extra time for us to finish.
Stuttering is how some people talk. It has nothing to do with intelligence or articulacy. Between 50-70 million people around the world stutter, from the President of the USA down. 8% of children will stutter at some point, and between 1-3% of adults say that they stutter.
Stuttering isn’t that unusual, but you wouldn’t know that based on how few people we hear stutter on the radio or television.
Indeed for many, the only time they see people stuttering on TV is Joe Biden, A Fish Called Wanda, The King’s Speech and Open All Hours.
This is unacceptable. It doesn’t reflect the real world where so many people stutter. It makes people who stutter feel isolated and unseen, or even ashamed and feeling the need to hide their stutter. It also means that people who don’t stutter don’t know what to do or how to react when they meet someone who does. This stigma, impacting people from the very start of their lives, affects mental health and career prospects, and results in a real loss of talent on every career path, every industry.
End this and include people who stutter routinely in your programming, because diversity includes disfluency.
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Petition created on 25 November 2021