"If you couch it in terms of how many thousands of people see them, it is a shame that people focus on the negative," Ms Huby said.
Others said it looked like an "emergency helicopter landing pad", an "octagon fighting ring" or "Legoland".Another user joked it could be a "distraction from potholes".
A mum whose 17-year-old daughter took her own life is planning to walk across Devon to raise money in her memory.Darcy, who died in 2021, would have been 22 this year.In honour of this, her mum Debbie Hollinson plans to walk 22 miles (35km) from Tavistock, where Darcy lived, to Plymouth, where she was at school on 25 May.
"I'll be thinking about Darcy with every step, wishing she was with us," said Ms Hollinson, a Devon and Cornwall Police community support officer.It is the latest in a series of events organised by Ms Hollinson in memory of her daughter, and in aid of Papyrus, a suicide prevention charity.
The goal is to raise £22,000.
Ms Hollinson said: "I wish I wasn't doing this at all.that it centred on a boy called Abdullah who is the son of Hamas's deputy minister of agriculture. Hamas is proscribed as a terrorist organisation by the UK and others.
It also launched a review into the film, and the BBC's Board met earlier on Thursday to discuss it.In the statement, a BBC spokesperson said both the production company and the BBC had made "unacceptable" flaws and that it "takes full responsibility for these and the impact that these have had on the corporation's reputation".
It added the BBC had not been informed of the teenager's family connection in advance by the film's production company.The spokesperson says: "During the production process, the independent production company was asked in writing a number of times by the BBC about any potential connections he and his family might have with Hamas.