BBC Exposed
‘Death to IDF’ Glastonbury Rant Goes Nuclear: Rapper Claims "BBC Cheered" Hate-Charged Show
Glastonbury's 'Death to IDF' Chant Stirs Firestorm as Rapper Claims BBC Cheered Controversial Performance

In a bombshell revelation that's reignited fury over one of this summer's most divisive music moments, British rapper Bobby Vylan, the firebrand frontman of punk-hip-hop duo Bob Vylan, has spilled the tea on a post-performance pat on the back from the BBC itself. According to Vylan, just hours after belting out "death to the IDF" to a roaring Glastonbury crowd, BBC execs gushed that they "loved it."
The jaw-dropping claim dropped during a no-holds-barred chat on the podcast of British-American TV host Louis Theroux, where Vylan recounted the surreal exchange: "They (the BBC) told me – 'It was fantastic! We loved it!'" Theroux, visibly squirming in the clip, shot back with clear unease.
Flashback to Glastonbury's Powder Keg Performance
It all went down last June at the iconic Glastonbury Festival, where Bob Vylan, a London-based duo blending raw punk fury with hip-hop grit and grime edge, commandeered the West Holts main stage. Known for their unapologetic takedowns, the pair doesn't just play music; they wage war through it.
But what started as a high-energy set exploded into global headlines when Vylan and his bandmate rallied the massive crowd in thunderous chants of "death to the IDF" and "free Palestine." The incendiary outburst, broadcast live on the BBC, turned the festival into a flashpoint.