Channel 4 Pulls Celebrity Bake Off Episode Following Scott Mills Dismissal
The broadcaster quietly removed the former BBC Radio 1 DJ from its celebrity spin-off lineup after his March termination.
Channel 4 has withdrawn a Celebrity Bake Off episode featuring Scott Mills from its broadcast schedule, according to BBC News, following the presenter's termination from the BBC in March. Mills, who spent over two decades at BBC Radio 1 before his dismissal, had filmed the celebrity edition of the popular baking competition prior to his exit from the corporation.
The decision to pull the episode represents a familiar calculus for broadcasters managing pre-recorded content when contributors become embroiled in controversy. Channel 4 has not issued a public statement explaining the removal, nor has Mills commented on the matter.
The Institutional Precedent
This scenario echoes a pattern established over the past decade, where UK broadcasters increasingly reassess archived or scheduled programming featuring individuals who face professional disgrace. The practice gained momentum following the Jimmy Savile revelations in 2012, which prompted wholesale removal of content from BBC archives. While Mills' situation differs in scale and nature, the institutional reflex remains consistent: minimize association, limit potential backlash.
The Great British Bake Off's celebrity spin-off typically films episodes months in advance, creating a vulnerability window where participants' public standing can shift dramatically before broadcast. Channel 4 inherited the franchise from the BBC in 2017 and has navigated similar editorial decisions with other celebrity editions.
Mills' BBC career spanned multiple high-profile shows, including the Radio 1 Breakfast Show and his later move to Radio 2. His March dismissal marked an abrupt end to that tenure, though the BBC has not publicly detailed the reasons for his termination beyond confirming his departure.
The pulled episode's fate remains unclear — whether it will be rescheduled, reworked, or permanently shelved. Channel 4's silence suggests the broadcaster views discretion as the safer path, avoiding both the controversy of airing the episode and the attention that accompanies a formal explanation for its removal.
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