“I don’t think this is, technically, an obituary, which are, as you know, death notices that usually include a brief summary of the person’s career highlights and a reminder of their accomplishments and personal strengths, without any consideration of their flaws or weaknesses. If it is, then it must be the most disrespectful obituary ever written,” Ellis Cashmore, sociologist and cultural critic, and visiting professor of sociology at Aston University in the UK says.
“BBC News's 'obituary' reserved for the recently deceased Russian Liberal Democratic Party leader Zhirinovsky constitutes the lowest level so far reached by a Western media [outlet]. This event is of particular concern, as it comes from one of the most followed and professional Western media outlets. In particular, the derision reserved for the Russian politician, when the latter is dead, is not acceptable…This is a bad chapter in Western journalism,” Graziani says.
“I can’t help but feel there’s a slight bias in this report,” one user wrote. “As much as we all do not like the person in question, and the world possibly being better without said person, the use of such adjective shows an enormous lack of journalistic ethics and professionalism. No wonder more and more people are giving up on MSM such as BBC,” another added. “When did calling someone a clown become part of the news?” a third chimed in.