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BBC director-general Tim Davie has told MPs that "we may see more things coming out" after being asked for assurance there will not be another "scandal of BBC talent abusing their position".
He told the Culture, Media and Sport Committee: "I think things have changed since we last talked to the committee, we are seeing people call it out, and that is a positive change, but it's ongoing work. "I don't think you can change culture in six months and suddenly say nothing's going to occur.
"We may see more things coming out, because in some ways I'm asking for it, and being utterly transparent and running towards the problem, that's what we need to do." Mr Davie, who was joined by BBC chair Samir Shah on Tuesday, faced questions on subjects including the corporation's Gaza documentary, its Glastonbury coverage and the recent Gregg Wallace investigation, as well as this year's Strictly Come Dancing line-up. The BBC has faced a series of recent controversies, most prominently the sacking of MasterChef presenter Wallace after claims of inappropriate behaviour.
Presenter John Torode was later axed from the show after an allegation that he used an "extremely offensive racist term". On Monday, it was announced that restaurant critic Grace Dent and Irish chef Anna Haugh will be fronting the forthcoming series.
'No one is irreplaceable - absolutely no one' On the question of top talent being treated as irreplaceable, Mr Shah said: "No one is irreplaceable. Absolutely no one, seriously, no one".
Mr Davie added: "We're all dispensable. That's an absolute, unequivocal position being given to the whole BBC." He also stressed: "We don't call them talent… Everyone is talent." When asked about the decision to air the latest series of MasterChef, with Wallace and Torode still at the helm, Mr Davie said it was "a tough call," but insisted it was the right decision "on balance" because the "vast majority" of contestants wanted the programme to go out.
Mr Davie added: "I think the consequences for the individuals who presented have been very significant. They no longer work with the BBC." The corporation also found itself in hot water in July after it breached its editorial guidelines over a Gaza documentary that was narrated by the child of a Hamas official.
Gaza: How To Survive A Warzone aired on the BBC in February but was pulled from iPlayer after it emerged that the child narrator was the son of Ayman Alyazouri, who has worked as Hamas's deputy minister of agriculture. Mr Davie called the broadcast of the documentary, which was made by independent production company Hoyo Films, "a bad mistake.