"And let's face it, we all like to have a peek through the keyhole and be scandalised..."
Not quite quoting, but it was words to that effect, by a red haired woman to the man who was fronting the film.The red haired woman is the director/producer, Penny Woolcock, the person responsible for this film. She is (according to BAFTA at least) a highly respected writer and director, and you can hear her take on ethics and principles of making a documentary here
http://guru.bafta.org/penny-woolcock-risk-and-range-documentaryThis flies in the face of her approach to making "Going to the Dogs." You might like to look at her FB page to see how she dismisses all criticism of her documentary ("14,691 people who haven't seen the film"), and to read some of the interviews she has given since to The Independent, The Guardian and others (see , in which she comments that "the dogs were lovely," they were "largely well cared for" and she wasn't "scared of them at all." It's impossible to reconcile these statements with the film footage of a dog shown literally racing for its life tied to a treadmill going so fast its legs are just a blur, and the fact that these dogs never see a vet. They just carry on training and fighting until they are maimed or killed in the ring.
Penny Woolcock then turns to speculating that the difference between shooting pheasants and dog fighting is that first being acceptable only because it is traditionally the sport of the wealthy and privileged, whereas dog fighting is associated with poor, disadvantaged communities. This after one of the contributors boasts that his dog took 27 minutes to kill its opponent (the "Russian dog").
Quite apart from the breathtaking smugness and hypocrisy of the woman (it's no good the police asking her anything, apparently, because she doesn't know and doesn't want to know any of the participants appearing in the film--contrast this to her comments in the BAFTA interview), her "research" is utterly worthless in terms of raising public awareness of dog fighting in order to stop it.
Please take a minute to give feedback to Channel 4 at
http://www.channel4.com/4viewers/contact-us. You can also send in your complaint to Ofcom at
https://stakeholders.ofcom.org.uk/tell-us/specific-programme-epg