Formula 1 Racing

Less swearing? FIA wants F1 to reverse its usual team radio priorities · RaceFans

Max Verstappen, Red Bull, Singapore, 2024

It was once a standing joke among Formula 1 race engineers that if they wanted to tell their driver something on the radio but ensure the crucial information was not played out on the world feed for all to hear, there was only one thing they had to do:

Swear.

Whether many of them actually did bookend their vital set-up chatter with enough profanity to make Guenther Steiner blanch is unknown. But what is clear is this approach wouldn’t work today.

Wheel-to-wheel racing action may get overlooked in favour of tiresome crowd shots, but you can’t accuse F1’s television director of allowing fans to miss those all-important F-bombs (see the transcript below for an example).

FIA president Mohammed Ben Sulayem is not a fan, however, and admitted this week he has urged F1 to tone down the bad language (or, as some mystifyingly insist on calling it, ‘language’). “They say the ‘f’ word how many times per minute?” he asked.

Report: “Don’t broadcast it”: Verstappen bemused by Ben Sulayem’s swearing complaints

But here’s the thing: If you’re watching F1 via the world feed alone, as the vast majority of viewers no doubt do, you wouldn’t necessarily be in a position to know. F1 may broadcast team radio clips which include swearing, but it is invariably ‘bleeped’ out.

Which begs the question: What exactly is there to get offended about here? Playing the drivers’ messages out but censoring the inappropriate language is a reasonable balance which F1 has adhered to for years.

For those who want to hear what the drivers have to say unfiltered, F1 TV’s onboard camera channels exist. But even this is no longer completely free of censorship.

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Since last year FOM has censored some team radio messages on the onboard camera feeds. Significantly, these messages are not ‘bleeped’ but erased entirely, so the viewer has no way of knowing if they have missed something.

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FOM routinely resorts to this after a driver suffers a crash. Both Sergio Perez and Carlos Sainz Jnr’s radio feeds were muted on their onboard feeds following their penultimate lap crash in Baku last weekend, although their radio clips were subsequently broadcast over the world feed. How much of what they said was censored, if any, is impossible to tell.

But as FOM is already censoring drivers’ messages in two different ways, surely no…

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