The Savile Culture of Shame (From The Argus)
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The Savile Culture of Shame
1:00pm Tuesday 9th October 2012 in opinion feed
By Jo Chipchase - Letting off steam
Now then now then, how did you get away with that, then?
A plethora of media commentary currently surrounds the Jimmy Savile case and, although the subject has already been explored from numerous angles, I feel compelled to add my two pence worth.
First of all, I don’t believe for a second that the BBC has ever been blissfully unaware of the scenario concerning Savile and young girls. Of course, there has been a giant cover-up going on for decades.
As an avid ‘Googler’ of various controversial topics relating to popular culture, along with thousands of other internet users, I first viewed material about Jimmy Savile’s unsavoury predilections, ooh, about a decade ago. It is easy to find internet forums discussing these topics, clearly visible in the public domain, and dating back several years.
Back in 2006, online rumours appeared about “Jimmy Savile necrophile”, regarding his activities at Leeds General Infirmary, where he worked as a volunteer porter. The online e-zine, Popbitch, claimed to have been approached by someone who had evidence regarding this rumour but later “lost” the contact concerned. The mind boggles as to whether there’s fire behind this particular smoke… I suspect that time will tell.
Going further back to 1999, an infamous “outtake” transcript from ‘Have I Got News for You’ focuses on Savile’s activities with underage girls. Although the transcript was later discredited as a fake (and well it might be), ISPs whose servers hosted it were, at the time, forced to take it down, under threat of legal action.
Even if the earlier outtake was a fake, other footage from ‘Have I Got News for You’, hinting at Savile’s nefarious activities – with pointed jokes about runners on a TV programme running away from his suggestion of “how’s your father” - appears in 2007.
And, on a BBC outtake of unverified credibility, publicised on YouTube this week, Savile is heard cavorting inappropriately with a young girl. Someone clearly had that footage stored away.
It seems to be that it wasn’t just a badly-kept secret; it wasn’t a secret at all.
In an interview with Bizarre Magazine, when Jimmy was still alive, he was asked which animal he would select, if he had to have relations with an animal (admittedly not the most tasteful of interview questions). His answer – rather tellingly – was: “It would have to be an 18-year-old Eastern European girl orphan that doesn’t speak much English.” When challenged by the shocked interviewer, Savile added: “We’re all animals. It’s a joke.”
There was also Savile’s inappropriate defence of Gary Glitter. He is on record as saying “And of course… what’s Gary Glitter done wrong? Well nothing really. He’s just sat at home watching these dodgy, dodgy films. He was like that but he wasn’t public and he didn’t do anything.”
Savile’s own 1974 biography, ‘As it Happens’, relates tales of having close shaves with the parents of young girls, and of keeping a runaway girl from a borstal overnight for his own entertainment, before handing her over to the WPC who was seeking her in Leeds. So his tendencies were hardly well-hidden from Aunty Beeb and the public-at-large, were they?
Whether it was his threats to have victims’ arms broken, his connection to unscrupulous underworld characters such as the Krays, or his public image as a charity “saint”, Savile created a thick but not particularly convincing smokescreen. I imagine that it worked on a proportion of the population that doesn’t conduct their own Google research or read the more anarchic of news blogs.
Personally, I find it surprising that Jimmy’s obvious wrongness could pass scrutiny at all. Harking back to being a teenager in the 80s, while watching ‘Jim’ll Fix It’, I thought there was something seriously amiss with the man. Anyone who watched the infamous ‘When Louis Theroux met Jimmy’ documentary back in 2000 must have heard alarm bells ringing re Savile’s attitude to women and his strange fixation with his deceased mother, ‘The Duchess’. He clearly held unhealthy opinions about the opposite sex… and he had to be getting his kicks somewhere.
According to recent reportage, Douglas Muggeridge, controller of BBC Radio 1 in the early 70s, asked for a report on Savile’s unsavoury activities, and if they were likely to appear in the news. In those days, with Savile a valuable commodity, whether or not he would receive bad publicity was clearly the overriding concern. Of course, the answer proved to be “no”.
And, now then now then, what we must also remember: during the permissive 1960s and 70s, there wasn’t a pervasive ‘moral panic’ about paedophilia in UK society. This is in sharp contrast with today’s society, where parents cannot take a snapshot of their own child in a public swimming pool for fear of reprisals, swimming teachers cannot enter the water with their pupils to assist them, for fear of the ‘wrong sort of breast stroke’, and kids aren’t allowed to play out in the street for fear of molestation. We live in a culture that focuses on hunting down the paedophile.
In today’s climate, as an up-and-coming celebrity in the public eye, had Savile behaved inappropriately with under-aged girls, he would quickly have been rumbled by ‘News of the World’, arrested and placed on the Sex Offender’s Register. Back in the 1970s, however, the mauling of under-age girls by middle-aged TV presenters and pop stars was, clearly, something that received a widespread blind eye. That doesn’t make it right but, realistically, was the BBC the only workplace where blatant sexism, exploitation and harassment of women occurred? I think not.
One victim of Savile, who was sexually assaulted following a spinal operation in Leeds General Infirmary, says: “In the 1970s, if you tried reporting rape or sexual assault or something like that, you were accused of making it up. It was the age when short skirts were in fashion and you were accused of leading the man on; that you were asking for it.”
She adds: “People must have known the truth. People who worked with him must have heard one rumour then another – it would have been enough for something to have been done and investigated. There was a duty of care.” It seemed that the “duty of care” was buried in the culture of the time; and it stayed that way.
The mother of one of my close friends, who lives in Brighton, was mauled by Jimmy Savile in Devon in the 1960s, while she and a friend were driving him from her family home to a local gig. He had formed a friendship with her parents, possibly as another one of his smokescreens. Like many others, this woman didn't speak out about Savile at the time as it “wasn’t the done thing in those days”. Fortunately, she and the friend told him to get off and managed to resist his advances - which involved shoving his hands up miniskirts - and, hence, they remained relatively unscathed. The friend recently said: "He seemed to think it was all a joke - the horrible, disgusting, dirty old man.”
Why was Savile allowed to continue? Was it just to do with his charity work, his status in society as a ‘sacred cow’, or his reportedly “menacing” air? Recent postings on the more outspoken news blogs suggest that paedophile rings have existed, or still exist, in the entertainment industry – in the UK and in Hollywood - at the top levels of society. The implication being that, had Savile gone down for his unlawful molestation of minors, others in high places would have gone down with him… And still they might, if the online rumour mill proves accurate.
In this sorry scenario, vast amounts of people did, indeed collude, in the cover-up. Time will tell if the Savile case exists on its own or if it was the tip of a chilling iceberg.
Comments(11)
Archie Bun
says...
12:45pm Wed 10 Oct 12
Archie Bun
says...
12:50pm Wed 10 Oct 12
jamus77
says...
1:12pm Thu 11 Oct 12
Nosfaratu
says...
5:14pm Thu 11 Oct 12
jamus77 wrote:You have written my thoughts on this subject.
Oh Jo. Where to start? You have nothing here but hearsay, innuendo, internet gossip and supposition. Oh... and your hunch watching Jim'll Fix It that 'there was something seriously amiss'.Whatever the case against Jimmy - and I accept it doesn't look good - there is nothing in this blog but a lot of angry hot air I'm afraid. As the above poster says, it's too late now. I do find it a little strange that it's taken so long for all this to surface. We've been on 'paedo alert' in this country for the last decade and Jimmy's star was faded long before his death. Why was all this not brought to public attention when he was alive to defend himself?
I myself dont understand the attraction that paedophiles have for children and youngsters and deplore them for it.
I also understand the Law and and accusations made against someone must have some sort of proof otherwise it it hearsay.
This witch hunt will only hurt people, it wont bring justice. Just suppose 60's/ 70's and 80's famous Rock Stars being accused. We all know stuff happened, thats was how it was, but proving it ?
Maxwell's Ghost
says...
5:34pm Thu 11 Oct 12
We all know stuff happened.....well if we all know, then it's only right that we expose those involved.
As Edmund Burke said: It only takes the silence of a few good men for evil to flourish.
At least we now encourage our kids to openly say when someone has touched them.
This happened in an era when children and grown women had no protection in law and little protection in the workplace.
I worked in the media from the early 80s and it was rife with senior media men to scr* the girls from the ad department and then sack them if there was a fear their wives would find out and there are also a few celebs who have fearful reputations with sexual disinhibition and wandering hands.
Nosfaratu
says...
5:54pm Thu 11 Oct 12
Maxwell's Ghost wrote:Exactly,in the early 80's. Everything has changed now, why bring it all back, revenge.
Some of those people who might get hurt may well still be hurting chidlren. We all know stuff happened.....well if we all know, then it's only right that we expose those involved. As Edmund Burke said: It only takes the silence of a few good men for evil to flourish. At least we now encourage our kids to openly say when someone has touched them. This happened in an era when children and grown women had no protection in law and little protection in the workplace. I worked in the media from the early 80s and it was rife with senior media men to scr* the girls from the ad department and then sack them if there was a fear their wives would find out and there are also a few celebs who have fearful reputations with sexual disinhibition and wandering hands.
Its a bit late now unless you are supporting a countrywide witchhunt.
Shonky
says...
6:31pm Thu 11 Oct 12
That is seriously overvaluing Jo's contribution to the debate.
I'd far rather read a proper investigation by someone who is informed about this awful subject, rather than this gratuitous attempt to clamber onto a media bandwagon by bandying third-hand website hearsay.
And Argus, could you please stop serially abusing the English language?
In your intro line, it should be "two penn'orth" (two pennies' worth).
And in Ms Chip-paper's opening line, she uses "plethora" to mean "a lot" whereas it actually means "too many" (Freudian slip, maybe).
That's two howlers in two lines. As for the rest, it just gets worse. Are computer spellcheckers and dictionaries beyond this paper's means?
Could we instead have some properly written, accurate local news about the real issues that affect our home town? (And that doesn't mean another puff piece about Peter Andre.)
Maxwell's Ghost
says...
10:39pm Thu 11 Oct 12
It's the same when the police do cold case reviews of old crimes and solve them using modern forensic techniques.
Criminals need to face justice. Only those with something to hide should fear the hand of the law on their shoulders just like some of these poor children and women felt in their young lives.
Abusers are abusers and they committed criminal offences.
PorkBoat
says...
12:49pm Fri 12 Oct 12
Ex_Kiwi
says...
11:48am Sat 20 Oct 12
http://bit.ly/ourNZe
xperience
Jaxx Hammond says...
6:34pm Tue 9 Oct 12
Read the piece on my Art By Jaxx blog -
http://artbyjaxx.wor
dpress.com/2012/10/0
3/jimmy-savile-tried
-it-on-with-my-mothe
r-in-the-1960s/