American Reacts to Jimmy Savile | Crimes That Shook Britain

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  • čas přidán 25. 06. 2021
  • Hey Fam!!! I’m so livid at the fact that Jimmy Savile was able to go many many years without being charged. Jimmy Savile abused so many innocent children. There was no justice for the victims at all. Jimmy Savile dying wasn’t justice, I feel like everyone that covered anything up regarding Jimmy Savile should be prosecuted.
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Komentáře • 961

  • @AshleysReview
    @AshleysReview  Před 2 lety +217

    Hey Fam!!! I’m so livid that no one believed the victims. I really wish justice was served properly. This sh*t makes me so mad. 🤬

    • @lydonj3023
      @lydonj3023 Před 2 lety +19

      You should look at the scandal of grooming gangs.

    • @anitahargreaves9526
      @anitahargreaves9526 Před 2 lety +18

      Brave to review, he was protected by powerful and sadly still alive, corrupt organisations. 🇬🇧 🙏

    • @marcusbee9233
      @marcusbee9233 Před 2 lety +14

      He was protected by the bbc the goverment an the royal family . england is so corrupt . love ur reactions.. one love...

    • @lobbyskids2
      @lobbyskids2 Před 2 lety +12

      Yer watch the show called 3 girls. About the grooming gangs in Rotherham. To this day they are trying to cover up who was committing these crimes against children.

    • @Red-hh7dm
      @Red-hh7dm Před 2 lety +13

      The BBC is responsible Ashley

  • @RedDevil_Joe
    @RedDevil_Joe Před 2 lety +223

    Johnny rotten, the lead of the band ‘The Sex Pistols’ brought up these rumours about him in the 1970s in a BBC interview, the bbc buried it and it never came out until after he died I believe. Disgusting

    • @countofdownable
      @countofdownable Před 2 lety +22

      Yes they censored Johnny Rotten when he spoke out against Savile.

    • @ChubbyChecker182
      @ChubbyChecker182 Před 2 lety +7

      He should have written a song about him

    • @sputt100
      @sputt100 Před 2 lety +5

      yes you are so right god gless jonny rotten no one liscend to him

    • @josmith2031
      @josmith2031 Před 2 lety +5

      @@countofdownable god bless John ❤️

  • @rain7bow437
    @rain7bow437 Před 2 lety +87

    My grandad was a charge nurse in a hospital where Saville visited a few times and he disliked him as soon as he met him and knew there was something weird about him but when he tried to speak up about it to his boss, he was told to shut up or he'd be out of a job.

    • @cyberash3000
      @cyberash3000 Před 2 lety

      people tell me i give off a jimmy saville vibe, when i worked in childrens care. but i never abused anyone lol

    • @countofdownable
      @countofdownable Před 2 lety +7

      The captain of a cruise ship 🚢 ordered him off his ship at the next port. The parents of a young girl complained about him and the captain took their word over his.

    • @cyberash3000
      @cyberash3000 Před 2 lety

      @Luke Mills i wasnt joking.

    • @cyberash3000
      @cyberash3000 Před 2 lety

      @Luke Mills czcams.com/video/ZzkTewpzjss/video.html&ab_channel=JimmyCarr here is jimmy car, please enjoy all his jokes about sexual abuse.

    • @vermilliongecko
      @vermilliongecko Před 2 lety +3

      @@cyberash3000 Jimmy Carr's jokes about sexual abuse aren't funny either. You type a comment, and put 'LOL' afterwards, people are gonna think you're joking. Maybe stay off the internet until you work it out?

  • @chimpbabe
    @chimpbabe Před 2 lety +155

    Me and my mate had a lucky escape back in the 70's. We were schoolgirls who liked to visit BBC television centre to try to see celebrities and get autographs (remember them lol). One time as we were stood by the entrance, Saville came out in his Rolls Royce. We of course ran over to the car and that's when he asked if we wanted to get in and go for a ride. Although really excited, we hesitated and then declined. Thank god we did, it could have ended badly.

    • @zaftra
      @zaftra Před 2 lety +10

      You see, these flights of fancy are the thing that convicted a person. DJ's in them days in the UK were like pop stars now

    • @hobi1kenobi112
      @hobi1kenobi112 Před 2 lety +6

      @@zaftra This is post WW2 UK and most working class people (the majority of the UK) had very little in terms of material wealth. There was not much to do and kids made their own entertainment. So celebrities like Savile, as weird as he was, would have dazzled people back then because he was so enigmatic, rich, well-connected, everything most ordinary people weren't. He used the naive and starry-eyed public to get what he wanted. It wouldn't happen like that now. People are a lot wiser to the tricks of paedophiles, and they are a lot more outspoken. Newspapers are waiting to bust paedophiles, not cover up for them. Times have changed, thankfully. Though of course abuse still happens. :(

    • @zaftra
      @zaftra Před 2 lety

      @@hobi1kenobi112 He was known as a little eccentric man that lived with him mum even back then.
      And don't give me the groomed twaddle, no female goes with any man unless they want to, try asking a woman out who's not interested; even leaving aside there is zero REAL evidence of kid fiddling in Saville case, you have to be a least 16 to go to TOTP, kid fiddling is 13 and under.

    • @CoolDude-jp1kj
      @CoolDude-jp1kj Před 2 lety +1

      Damn

    • @murdoch691
      @murdoch691 Před 2 lety

      You both trusted your gut instincts thank god coz this was a truly evil human being a man that has since been shone to have abused a child in a coma FFS

  • @04williamsl
    @04williamsl Před 2 lety +191

    A woman I worked with danced for Jimmy on Jim'll Fix It when she was a young teen. I remember her telling us she never had any inkling at all that there was something off about him until she actually went on the show. She said he was just so creepy that none of them in her dance troupe wanted to actually go on and perform.
    And this is why we hate the BBC. They knew how bad he was but kept it quiet for decades

    • @mariahoulihan9483
      @mariahoulihan9483 Před 2 lety +11

      My friends Father, as a young man, attended one of the nightclubs Saville rang in Leeds. He didn't know him personally but had a huge dislike for him - for being so creepy around girls. He gave him a wide berth bt never liked him on tv because of those things he experienced. He was not at all surprised when the truth came out.. apart from the extent of of it of course.

    • @zaftra
      @zaftra Před 2 lety +1

      Except Legs and Co I assume.

    • @captvimes
      @captvimes Před 2 lety +4

      Really? We used to make jokes about how creepy he was and how he wanted the girls to sit on his "special chair". But i dont come from a rich background so maybe that is why we realised what he was.

    • @vickishaw6053
      @vickishaw6053 Před 2 lety +1

      I was taught by a women who worked at the BBC when he was around and the stories she told us... Absolutely disgusting man

    • @zaftra
      @zaftra Před 2 lety

      @@vickishaw6053 Let me guess, no evidence? And nobody said a thing against him when he was alive.

  • @mrandrews3616
    @mrandrews3616 Před 2 lety +42

    I remember when after Saville died and the first reports of his crimes were coming out there were a lot of people who thought "I can't believe so many are trying to pick apart reputation for publicity" but then as more details were released, it slowly dawned on us all that one of the most famous people in the country was one of its worst criminals. It was shocking.

    • @gillianhynes7120
      @gillianhynes7120 Před 2 lety +4

      I remember his niece and girlfriend on a program saying it was all lies.

    • @robertkidd6270
      @robertkidd6270 Před 2 lety +1

      Just wait till you find out who else is up to the same thing as Jimmy ....examples ;all royal families world wide ...the Pope and cardinals in fact all high society .sad but true.

    • @mrandrews3616
      @mrandrews3616 Před 2 lety +3

      @@robertkidd6270 Are you self medicating?

    • @robertkidd6270
      @robertkidd6270 Před 2 lety

      @@mrandrews3616 that's exactly what was said about the people who spoke out about Jimmy....and no I'm not self medicating lol...
      There's plenty of evidence that will never get general release to the public because the fact remains. ..do your own research.

    • @mrandrews3616
      @mrandrews3616 Před 2 lety +2

      @@robertkidd6270 or a relatively small collection of powerful people are involved in such activities. Blaming everyone who had anything to do with Saville is moronic.

  • @Chiggins_
    @Chiggins_ Před 2 lety +32

    Another detail that wasn't mentioned in this or in the comments from what I can see, is that, having the keys to the hospital, not only did he abuse sick children, disabled children, and dying children, but it goes one step further; a few nurses have come forward saying they saw him hanging around and going in and out of the morgue and suspected that he was molesting the corpses of dead children. But, of course, when they tried to tell their bosses about it, they were just told "be quiet or you'll lose your job".

  • @timberwolf5211
    @timberwolf5211 Před 2 lety +13

    It's hard to explain how "big" Saville was, especially in the 70s and 80s. He was every where, on BBC Radio 1 DJing, presenting the BBC1 chart show, Top of the Pops on TV, and Jim'll Fix It, on BBC1 on Saturday nights, and he was alway in the news for his charity work.
    He literally was a household name.
    Kids wanted to write to his show, "Dear Jim, please can you fix it for me to...." if you were lucky, you got your wish. I remember a Cub Scout Pack wanted him to fix it to eat a packed lunch on a roller-coaster, which the BBC fixed for them. And afterwards, having had your fixit, Saville would present you with a medal, saying Jim Fixed It For Me.
    Imagine Jeffery Epstein with the popularity of Carson, Conan, Leno, Letterman, and a splash of Andy Williams, all rolled into one.
    He had very high friends in even higher places.

  • @paulWalker-zh7nk
    @paulWalker-zh7nk Před 2 lety +58

    He's not the only celebrity who got away with it ,,and some still at it today ,

    • @georgebarnes8163
      @georgebarnes8163 Před 2 lety +1

      Not forgetting the worst of the lot of them, namely Charlie Chaplin, he got away with it big time.

  • @VK-yg8lp
    @VK-yg8lp Před 2 lety +85

    He had a lot of information on a lot of very prominent people and if he got found out he would take them all down with him. Thats why his actions were covered up. They were all abusers.

    • @David-uq2uk
      @David-uq2uk Před 2 lety +7

      Yep saville knew everyone from celebs the rich judges barristers mp,s just a shame 3 years before he died the police should have investigated him more

    • @gyver8448
      @gyver8448 Před 2 lety +4

      Exactly. Ashley's comparison to Epstein is very apt I think for exactly those reasons.

  • @johndare3576
    @johndare3576 Před 2 lety +80

    A very dark episode in recent British history. Sadly he’s not the only person in a position of power and influence who has done this.

  • @gaz8177
    @gaz8177 Před 2 lety +79

    Yea Ashley his crimes came to light after he’d died, though most suspected he was a wrongun. He was protected by powerful people

    • @mediavideos2176
      @mediavideos2176 Před 2 lety +6

      Same with Michael Jackson.

    • @gaz8177
      @gaz8177 Před 2 lety +5

      @@mediavideos2176 not going say he definitely did the same as Saville but still doesn’t sit well with me that Jackson also paid off family’s of accusers

    • @willmartin4474
      @willmartin4474 Před 2 lety +7

      @@mediavideos2176 how do you work that one out, Micheal jackson was never protected by the media, elites or anyone, the elite pedophiles cover each others back, i.e. politicians and the like, they went for Michael Jackson like a pack of wolves, so it makes me question weather he did it, they tried to destroy him, we need to use critical thinking, and not follow the propaganda

    • @mediavideos2176
      @mediavideos2176 Před 2 lety +5

      @@willmartin4474 If he paid of the accusers he defo did it.

    • @willmartin4474
      @willmartin4474 Před 2 lety +2

      @@mediavideos2176 oh really is that how it works, as clear cut as that is it, dont be so gullible, that is not the full picture, and im not particularly a MJ fan, i just say what i see, but thats your opinion, thats fare enough

  • @michaelmillett8724
    @michaelmillett8724 Před 2 lety +25

    He did a show on the BBC called Top of the Pops. Many of the stars that appeared on that tried to warn the BBC about him but they were silenced. Some of the others joined his 'gang' of perverts.

  • @the98themperoroftheholybri33

    Jimmy Savile had a kids TV show called "Jim'll fix it" which is similar to make a wish, children would write into the show and ask for something they wanted and they'd try to make it happen, so he was trusted by children services.

    • @pambull2790
      @pambull2790 Před 2 lety

      I wrote to him luckily I didn't post it

  • @heathergibson2108
    @heathergibson2108 Před 2 lety +30

    People in high places knew .powerful people . And all covered for him

  • @iansmith4023
    @iansmith4023 Před 2 lety +7

    I worked at the BBC in the mid-80s. It was my first job,and I was a general assistant (basically, a runner). I worked in a department that often had well-known TV people visiting it. The supervisor said to me he got on with all of them,except Saville. He said that whenever he showed up in his department he would completely ignore him. He said something along the lines of "I know he's done a lot for charity;but he's a really nasty piece of work" He wouldn't say more (I was just a junior employee) but clearly this fact was generally known back then.

  • @XENONEOMORPH1979
    @XENONEOMORPH1979 Před 2 lety +9

    The BBC and thoes that worked at the BBC knew about it also at the hospitals these people should be named and shamed and marked as what they deserve.

  • @salvadormarley
    @salvadormarley Před 2 lety +13

    Watched him my whole life on UK tv. Never liked him but never suspected what eventually came out after his death. One thing that always struck me that was he never genuinely laughed or showed real emotion. A cold, cruel sociopath. He came from my home town of Leeds and it was a well known fact that he enjoyed "visiting the morgue" when he volunteered as a worker at the local hospital - make of that what you will.

  • @sampeeps3371
    @sampeeps3371 Před 2 lety +33

    I've got a friend who poses as an 11 year old girl/boy decoy to catch predators. In 6 hours there were hundreds of men in the Inbox. Sickening

  • @martinhansen6468
    @martinhansen6468 Před 2 lety +13

    My mum worked as a night duty nurse at Stoke Mandeville hospital when he was there. He was given the code word “wandering hands” by the staff and as he went from ward to ward they would warn each other. When he was visiting a ward the nurses would “buzz” around him to ensure he was never alone with a patient or member of staff. She only told me this after he had died as they had all feared being sacked if they had spoken up before.

    • @TheHestya
      @TheHestya Před 11 měsíci

      At least someone tried to protect the kids. The number of people who ignored what he did is baffling.

    • @zorls
      @zorls Před 6 měsíci

      Jesus that's awful man :(

  • @kevinbingham157
    @kevinbingham157 Před 2 lety +15

    It all was covered up by the BBC.

  • @kevinbingham157
    @kevinbingham157 Před 2 lety +27

    He was a evil man, his money kept him from justice.

    • @georgejob7544
      @georgejob7544 Před 2 lety +2

      And the establishment who covered this monster up !
      BBC hierarchy! They knew !😱

  • @DrogoBaggins987
    @DrogoBaggins987 Před 2 lety +13

    He was a whole lot like Epestine. They were both personal friends with the royal family. They were both part of that same powerful circle of child abusers. By the lack of news of anyone being charged and knowing that these people never stop abusing children it's logically impossible that those activities have stopped.

  • @threethymes
    @threethymes Před 2 lety +10

    What is worrying is that this documentary doesn't talk enough the BBC's role in Savile's abusive activities. He was the main presenter of Top of the Pops (as well as Jim'll Fix it) over years and was one of many male abusers of the young girls that attended that pop show. It also doesn't investigate the role of people like Thatcher and other politicians like Edwina Currie who, as health minister, granted him access to Broadmoor hospital. I met him once on a charity event where he was the star and he was as creepy as hell. Vile man.
    Your reactions are spot on about him. Thank you for this.

    • @ichiru6637
      @ichiru6637 Před 2 lety

      Plus Prince Charles was really close to Saville. It raises more questions than answers

    • @alondathomas293
      @alondathomas293 Před 2 lety

      There's a new documentary called Jimmy Savile: A British Horror Story on Netflix, btw.

  • @jacksmith4460
    @jacksmith4460 Před 2 lety +31

    A good friend of mine was abuse sexually when he was small, he is an alcoholic these days. Struggles to deal with his anger about it. The damage this shit does is terrible

    • @AshleysReview
      @AshleysReview  Před 2 lety +4

      😢😢💔

    • @kennashan
      @kennashan Před 2 lety +4

      One of my best friends was molested as a young girl. I lost her to an OD 2 years ago. What happened to her killed her, just as sure as if the one who did it, shot her. It just took a couple decades, rather than an instant.

    • @thefuck1742
      @thefuck1742 Před 2 lety +3

      I have a friend that told me about that happening to him when he was little too he seems pretty outgoing and stuff but he does drink and smoke weed alot like every day it seems like he drinks cus he likes to drink though . but who knows maybe it cud be cause of that

    • @TheHestya
      @TheHestya Před 11 měsíci

      @@thefuck1742 I've never met an alcoholic who drinks because they enjoy the drink.

  • @jasonjones5357
    @jasonjones5357 Před 2 lety +51

    Such a shame he died while they were starting to look into everything Ash. More than anyone EVER I'd have liked to have seen that smug grin wiped off his face.

    • @samuelmartin8052
      @samuelmartin8052 Před 2 lety +5

      That's wasn't a coincidence that was deliberate they covered up what he did for years🤢🤮

    • @allyaldridge
      @allyaldridge Před 2 lety +5

      @@samuelmartin8052 Yep. It’s very suspicious. Almost like he was Epsteined so he couldn’t give the names of other important people at those “parties”.

    • @josephgilligan9698
      @josephgilligan9698 Před 10 měsíci

      Not a shame. Main stream media and establishment are peo#os . Fukc the BBC SCUM.

  • @ariaxrose1
    @ariaxrose1 Před 2 lety +105

    Will you do more crimes that shook Britain? James bulger is the one you should watch next

    • @gaz8177
      @gaz8177 Před 2 lety +20

      She definitely needs watch/react to more British crime. James Bulger case was another sickening story

    • @boffgirl
      @boffgirl Před 2 lety +13

      Still breaks my heart and I was a kid when it happened.

    • @CaemahdlO
      @CaemahdlO Před 2 lety +17

      Yes, this was one of the worst crimes in the UK. I was just 10 years old at the time & it was heart breaking. I just couldn't understand how 2 kids my age could commit such a crime. There is also the murders of Sarah Payne & best friends Holly & Jessica

    • @gaz8177
      @gaz8177 Před 2 lety +5

      @@boffgirl me too, 1993.. I was 14 even at the time I couldn’t believe what I was watching on the news. It was barbaric what happened to him

    • @kimarnill7648
      @kimarnill7648 Před 2 lety +10

      I think the moors murders was totally vile. As with all murders , but when it involves children it’s shocking.😩

  • @paulWalker-zh7nk
    @paulWalker-zh7nk Před 2 lety +19

    It just goes to show ,it's not what you know ,it's who you know..he and many more celebrities got away with child abuse for years and some still are

  • @markkelly9621
    @markkelly9621 Před 2 lety +15

    Re victims taking money - bear in mind they probably realise that the allegation would be difficult to prove in Court and also going to trial would be stressful and bring more attention on the victims when they are feeling vulnerable.
    So they might see taking money as the only way of getting any justice for themselves with minimal further stress.

    • @vermilliongecko
      @vermilliongecko Před 2 lety +4

      THIS. Also bear in mind that conviction rates were much lower in the 1950's, and there was no such thing as DNA testing. Someone would pretty much have to have caught him in the act for him to get convicted.

  • @kevinbingham157
    @kevinbingham157 Před 2 lety +27

    My blood boils when I see his face

  • @AshleysReview
    @AshleysReview  Před 2 lety +18

    Oh yeah... BBC needs to be taking down as well.

    • @lydonj3023
      @lydonj3023 Před 2 lety +8

      Anyone who tries to take down the BBC will face the full force of the Establishment. Just look at what happened to Tommy Robinson

    • @AshleysReview
      @AshleysReview  Před 2 lety +2

      @Lydon j Wow, BBC is that powerful?

    • @heathergibson2108
      @heathergibson2108 Před 2 lety +1

      @@AshleysReview YES

    • @lydonj3023
      @lydonj3023 Před 2 lety +3

      @@AshleysReview Yes they are! They have the backing of all social media companies as well as all main stream media, Police and political parties.

    • @lydonj3023
      @lydonj3023 Před 2 lety +6

      @@AshleysReview Look into the grooming gangs in the UK and see what happens to anyone who dare speak of it.

  • @cyberlee5889
    @cyberlee5889 Před 2 lety +16

    I believe there is an episode about Rolf Harris a very similar story!!! I grew up watching Rolf Harris and now i feel guilty for liking him back then!!! Such aweful men!!

    • @mrmegahousefly
      @mrmegahousefly Před 2 lety +2

      Rolf Harris had a TV series in which he taught children to swim. I do not think it has been repeated. I thought he looked at the teenage and pre-teen girls as if they were chocolates. Perhaps I was not the only one who thought that and that is why it has not been shown for many years but he still got to make other shows.

  • @PamelaDixon88
    @PamelaDixon88 Před 2 lety +36

    There’s even a video of him on CZcams touching a young Colleen Nolan ( the singer from the Nolan sisters ) on the music show top of the pops, he even flaunted his degeneracy in front of millions on tv. Sick!

    • @zaftra
      @zaftra Před 2 lety +2

      The clip is on CZcams go and watch it, he only had his arm on her waist the same way every single top of the top presenter did, people are post reading something into it that simply isn't there, and this is the type of thing he was convicted over.

    • @Hi-kq1vi
      @Hi-kq1vi Před 2 lety

      He used to grab the girls in the audience, not the only one mind you-DLT was another one.

    • @zaftra
      @zaftra Před 2 lety

      @@Hi-kq1vi And DLT was accused, but was alive so could go to court, and was found not guilty on all charges.
      They all did the crowd interaction.

    • @Hi-kq1vi
      @Hi-kq1vi Před 2 lety

      @@zaftra DLT was found guilty of a sexual assault he committed in the 1990's at the BBC in 2014.

    • @zaftra
      @zaftra Před 2 lety

      @@Hi-kq1vi Wasn't even a majority verdict even then, by 2014 it was starting to get to the metoo time of woman speaks man guilty.
      From wiki:
      In October 2013, Travis was charged (pleading not guilty) with 14 allegations of indecent assault and one of sexual assault between 1976 and 2008, relating to 11 female complainants aged between 15 and 29 at the time of the alleged offences.[4] The trial began in January 2014 at Southwark Crown Court. On 13 February, Travis was found not guilty on twelve counts, and the jury failed to reach a verdict on the remaining two counts. Following the verdict, Travis told reporters "I do not feel like there is a victory in any way, shape or form. On the contrary, I think you already know that I have been through a year and a half of hell on this."[5] On 24 February, it was reported that the prosecution was seeking a retrial on the two outstanding counts.[25]
      On 28 March 2014, it was reported that Travis would face another charge of indecent assault as well as the retrial on the two outstanding counts.[26] On 15 April, it was reported that he was facing another charge of indecent assault on a woman aged over 16 in 1995. He appeared at Westminster Magistrates' Court on 24 April, when he denied the charges.[27] His trial began on 5 September at Southwark Crown Court.[6][28] On 23 September, Travis was found guilty by a majority verdict of 10-2 of indecently assaulting a female researcher working on the Mrs Merton Show in 1995. He was found not guilty of indecently assaulting another woman while he was appearing in a production of Aladdin in 1990.[29] The jury was unable to reach a verdict on a third charge from 2008, involving a journalist who visited his home.[30] On Friday 26 September 2014, he was sentenced to three months in prison, suspended for two years.[31]
      ..............................................................
      These people were very famous in their day, with plenty of camp followers, as all pop/ film/ dj stars do, any one of those followers when there is compensation in the offing can suddenly say they were assaulted.

  • @swannvictor1388
    @swannvictor1388 Před 2 lety +3

    Hi Ash, looking wonderful as usual. I used to work at the BBC in the 80s ( I was a cameraman ) and Savile had few friends - nobody really liked him as he gave bad vibes. None of us ever suspected he was a child molester. Problem was, like all DJ's were naughty with young girls and having worked with a lot of them, I used to see young girls behaving very badly with DJs - its the 'Fame' thing of course, much like footballers: young men, lots of cash....But Savile was highly intelligent and supremely cunning: he had a lot of 'dirt' on a lot of powerful people. Nobody can really say how high up the BBC the rot went, all I know as a cameraman was that he was disliked and considered 'creepy' but we were innocent in those days : Paedophilia was an unknown word! His charity work gave him a shield and access to vulnerable people. While I was surprised by the news, I wasn't shocked.
    A very sad chapter of British life. Stay strong Ash, stay happy.

  • @Tinaf653
    @Tinaf653 Před 2 lety +4

    I met him as a child. There was something about him that made me shy away from him, but could never put my finger on what. I was lucky too that my Dad was with me, but of course, once all this came out once Saville died, I realised what I must have sensed.

  • @richt71
    @richt71 Před 2 lety +3

    Hey Ashley,
    His acts were 'known' about within the powers that be. I have a friend who's father was a police sergeant in Scarborough where Jimmy Saville had a holiday home and was warned by his father to stay away from Saville. This was the 70's!
    I have another friend who helped run number 10 for a number of years when Margaret Thatcher was in power and saw Saville turn up many times to take tea with Thatcher. She was aware of rumours about Saville but apparently was more interested in the millions he raised for charity.
    I remember seeing Saville sat at York railway station on his own in his trademark tracksuit and sheepskin coat. He was sat on his own. I thought about saying hi to him but thankfully didn't!
    There was a big enquiry into Saville and everyone turning a blind eye as well as giving access to troubled/disabled kids. Classic case of his public power and fame covered all. :(

  • @ancientruby7116
    @ancientruby7116 Před 2 lety +4

    That disgusting man is the very reason i stopped watching the BBC because many complained about what they saw him do yet they all protected him. He kept in with the Royals too so he had protection. GRR! This has also been so downplayed with many victims not coming forward plus those that died too, it is so disgraceful and sick! Shame on those that never reported him and so sad for the victims.

  • @michaelcooper9493
    @michaelcooper9493 Před 2 lety +8

    He requested his grave to face the sea, as his place of internment is on the North Yorkshire coast he also request concrete was to be poured on top of his coffin to deter his grave being interfered with. If thats not someone wanting to make it hard to get a DNA sample post mortem i don't know what is.

    • @vermilliongecko
      @vermilliongecko Před 2 lety +1

      Probably also to deter graverobbers. Benny Hill had been dug up by graverobbers looking for valuables a few years earlier, and we all know Jimmy loved his gold jewellery.

    • @N_0968
      @N_0968 Před 2 lety +2

      At least his gravestone got removed from his grave.

    • @sarahholland2600
      @sarahholland2600 Před 2 lety +1

      Familial DNA from a relative could still confirm stuff. It's been used decades after the criminal had died in the US , to solve cold cases.

  • @clarenceflam
    @clarenceflam Před 2 lety +24

    As awful as this is to watch, I'm glad you did, it is important to learn and understand, especially when following your curiosity. Shameful piece of British history.

  • @futurez12
    @futurez12 Před 2 lety +5

    30:41 That guy got it bang on! I grew up watching Jimmy Savile during the 80s/early 90s and even as a kid I thought there was something strange about him. He _was_ robotic, and he didn't ever show a warm heart, even when he was 'fixing it' for kids on his show - it was almost like he was dead inside, and you never really got the sense that he really cared.
    He said all the right things, but he didn't say them right, if you see what I mean? The only time you saw any hint of emotion, it was of anger, when a journalist would ask him something he wasn't happy to answer; even that was under the surface, but you could tell it was bubbling underneath.
    He'd also adopt an annoying habit of rarely giving an answer to a question, even to seemingly innocent questions, as if he'd decided to never really tell the truth about _anything._ I imagine that was him making sure he was _always_ with his guard up, in case something slipped out.
    I asked my mum about him a couple of years back and she insisted that she always thought he was a creepy guy, though I can't remember her ever saying that. Looking back, it seems strange that he gained the popularity he did, but then that was probably, in no small part, due to the smokescreen of all his charity 'work' etc.
    Terrifyingly, my local hospital, when I was a kid during that time, was Stoke Mandeville. 😬 Luckily I only ever visited twice and never had to stay overnight.

  • @johncollectsstamps
    @johncollectsstamps Před 2 lety +4

    One of my friends was married to a Police officer in Yorkshire that tried for years to get him convicted in the 1990s/2000s, but every case fell apart after he was suspected of paying the victims off. This wasn't women, it was underage girls. Evil, vile man.

  • @gaz8177
    @gaz8177 Před 2 lety +17

    Hate him with a passion, grew up as a kid watching him on tv. I even wrote to him to come on his tv show I’m so glad he didn’t answer my letter

    • @alexp3519
      @alexp3519 Před 2 lety +1

      As my mum did with my sister, she then changed her mind at the last minute and never sent it

    • @gaz8177
      @gaz8177 Před 2 lety +1

      @@alexp3519 well done your mum 👍👍.. I think I was like 9/10 year old when sent it can’t really remember. We at the time were oblivious as a family to what he was

    • @alexp3519
      @alexp3519 Před 2 lety +2

      Very much so I'm so thankful she did

  • @awatt
    @awatt Před 2 lety +32

    That was a very hard watch. There is a dark side to British society and hopefully, this going public will bring about change.
    The saddest part of this is that everyone knew but the few that spoke out got hit with legal action from his lawyers.

    • @annother3350
      @annother3350 Před 2 lety +4

      That dark side is always the super rich elite

    • @robertkidd6270
      @robertkidd6270 Před 2 lety

      They are all ,in high society, upto the exact same thing as Jimmy.
      That is why nothing was or will be done to stop it.
      Until very very soon.

    • @annother3350
      @annother3350 Před 2 lety

      @@robertkidd6270 They do it to please their god.

    • @robertkidd6270
      @robertkidd6270 Před 2 lety

      @@annother3350 you hit the nail on the head beautiful.

    • @bechmam4750
      @bechmam4750 Před 2 lety

      @@annother3350 no it is also normal everday families.

  • @seivad74
    @seivad74 Před 2 lety +22

    Check out Rolf Harris or Garry Glitter in the series Crimes that shook Britain.

    • @heathergibson2108
      @heathergibson2108 Před 2 lety +1

      And to think glitter has just been released from prison ..beggars belief it really does

    • @countofdownable
      @countofdownable Před 2 lety +6

      Rolf Harris was a real shock 😲 as he wasn't creepy like Savile.

    • @georgebarnes8163
      @georgebarnes8163 Před 2 lety +1

      @@heathergibson2108 Glitter has not been released from prison at all, he will not be released until 2023 at the earliest.

    • @carameechan205
      @carameechan205 Před 2 lety

      @@georgebarnes8163 2023?! Should be locked up longer than that! xxx

    • @georgebarnes8163
      @georgebarnes8163 Před 2 lety +1

      @@carameechan205 2023 is the earliest he can get parole, if he serves the full sentence he will not be released until 2031. I think he needs to to be kept locked up right until 2031 myself.

  • @ade3628
    @ade3628 Před 2 lety +4

    My nan used to say "I wouldn't leave my kids with that man" way before all this come out. He always gave me the creeps when I seen him on TV as a kid.

  • @GrilloTheFlightless
    @GrilloTheFlightless Před 2 lety +4

    To be honest, it wasn’t just kids he was after (although that’s perhaps his worst and most common crime). My next door neighbour when I was a kid was a mental health nurse at Broadmoor hospital for the criminally insane at the time when the government shamelessly put him in charge for no apparent reason. She was in her 40s at the time and he groped her backside. When she reported it to her bosses she was silenced very quickly. There was a general feeling at the time of “If you make a formal complaint against some of Jimmy’s weird behaviour your career will come to an abrupt end”.
    I know of a guy who lived in my area who was a mental health nurse at Broadmoor when Saville was in charge. It was when they still had female patients. He claims that he remembers Saville inviting Rolf Harris to visit during the scheduled bath time where they watched heavily medicated female patient/inmates bathe. Again, nobody could challenge him without fear of their career ending.
    Edwina Curry was health minister at the time and signed the approval to the decision to put him in charge of the high security hospital, despite him having no experience or qualifications that would have made him suitable. I have to ask the question as to why he got the job. Who did he have a hold over who could swing the appointment for him? He had a hold over people in high places, of that I am sure. Did he know them to be fellow paedophiles? Did he have the power to destroy them? I don’t know.
    When people tried to publicly expose him, such as John Lydon of the Sex Pistols and PIL, or comedians like Jerry Sadowitz, their were black-balled from appearing on the BBC or, in the case of Sadowitz, threatened with legal action. Again, Savile had people high-up protecting him.
    As a kid I didn’t like him. We all thought he was weird. We all wrote in asking to be on the Jim’ll Fix It show. It wasn’t because we liked him but because there was a chance of being on telly and getting a wish fulfilled. Apart from his catch-phrases and general on-screen bonhomie he didn’t even seem to have any discernible talent, yet he was never off TV and fuelled his good image with his tireless charity work which, as Sadowitz claimed in the 1980s on in of his live albums, was to protect his image “in case his case came up.” Probably some truth in that.

  • @idontsignin
    @idontsignin Před 2 lety +16

    He was very powerful and had a lot of friends in very high places. He would threaten to take charity money away from hospitals if stories ever got out. He was depraved to the point he was a necrophiliac. cause there are stories of people seeing him in hospital morgues, he ever joked about it. He did believe that nobody would ever believe the victims.
    There's a video on youtube when he was presenting top of the pops and he was literally trying to feel up a woman on camera.

    • @vermilliongecko
      @vermilliongecko Před 2 lety +2

      The hospital morgue thing is true, there were witnesses. He also locked himself in a room with his mother's corpse when she died, and didn't come out for days.

  • @mustardtopdog9064
    @mustardtopdog9064 Před 2 lety +9

    Really one of the most despicable people who have ever lived. A national discrace and disgusting at the way it was allowed to continue when people new what he was doing.

  • @johnsimmons5951
    @johnsimmons5951 Před 2 lety +3

    When Saville was buried, his family put are large ornate memorial on the burial plot. Many people when to it to pay their respects.
    When the news came out about what he had done, the memorial was taken away by Saville's family and replaced by something more subdued.
    When he was alive he was a much loved celebrity, so the news of his crimes devastated everyone. We all felt cheated. It's hard to put into words the hurt and anger felt by everyone against Saville, and the sorrow for his victims.

  • @speleokeir
    @speleokeir Před 2 lety +7

    I remember as young kid watching Jim'll Fix It and I found the way he kept touching the kids really creepy even then. I had no idea what a pedophile was at that age, but my mum was a social worker who dealt with kids and had drummed it into me that such touching between adults and children was inappropriate, so I always wondered why nobody told him off or said anything.
    The sister of one of my friends actually wrote into the program when she was 10. She didn't get a reply but when she was 15 the BBC contacted her and asked if she still wanted to be on the show. She said no because her interests had changed by that time. I suspect she had a lucky escape.

  • @nicholaskelly6375
    @nicholaskelly6375 Před 2 lety +2

    Ashley The BBC knew all about him for many years.
    In the mid 1970's I attended a boarding school. One of my friends Dad worked for the BBC at quite a senior level. Well on one occasion when I was staying with my friend during the summer holidays in 1974 Saville's name came up and my friends Mum told me in no uncertain terms what he was like.
    Also another acquaintance who worked in the British Railways advertising department in the 1980's told me that when Saville was fronting the 'This Is The Age of The Train' advertising campaign British Railways were well aware of the situation. So much so that BR had a clause in the contract that they had with Saville which would allow them to drop him immediately like a proverbial "Hot Potato" and terminate the contract if the truth about him became public knowledge.
    Also British Railways provided a number of "Minders" to "Supervise Saville" whilst he was working for BR!
    It is just like the Jeffrey Epstein affair (This is remarkably similar to the Saville affair. Powerful friends like Bill Clinton, Donald Trump, Prince Andrew etc etc)
    Jimmy Saville had very powerful friends who protected him from any unwelcome attention from the authorities.
    Unfortunately he is an on going National Disgrace.

  • @jimmybisk
    @jimmybisk Před 2 lety +3

    It was a very hard thing to swallow given so many people looked up to the public persona of this guy during his lifetime. As Children, we were all encouraged to write to his show to try and get onto it & I did myself. In retrospect I can only say Thank God my letter was ignored!

  • @karonmorrison2531
    @karonmorrison2531 Před 2 lety +8

    Here I am again! When my nearly 31 year old son wanted to act in advertisements etc at aged 10. I would not let him be chaperoned by any stranger, I was vilified for this however but my child was my child, who I love!

    • @AshleysReview
      @AshleysReview  Před 2 lety +1

      Thank goodness you didn’t. ❤️❤️

    • @karonmorrison2531
      @karonmorrison2531 Před 2 lety +1

      @@AshleysReview I would never entrusted him, physically, emotionally, soulfully into anybodies grubby hands. I knew nothing of peodofiles (think I've spelt it correctly). Grew up in an extremely Roman Catholic background (not that's any excuse).
      Southern Irish Mum, Dad Mancunian, fought his way through a difficult life (poor, never knew where his home was) but said he would never go to bed hungry again.... and he kept his promise.... don't know where I am going with this Ashley, too deep!!!!

    • @N_0968
      @N_0968 Před 2 lety +2

      @@karonmorrison2531 That’s how every parent should act! Kudos to you!

  • @carlhartwell7978
    @carlhartwell7978 Před 2 lety +4

    The 'liking/not liking' kids thing was more like a double bluff. He had the public persona of liking them, then when the cameras turned off it was 'get these brats off me', but then when no one's around, clearly he liked them a little too much.

  • @karonmorrison2531
    @karonmorrison2531 Před 2 lety +7

    Horrid man, came to my place of work and kissed us women through the glass, thank goodness for the glass. He was bloody 'effing creepy! His visits were for charitable causes, he was a horrible person Ashley.

  • @GodlessScummer
    @GodlessScummer Před 2 lety +5

    I was a kid when Savile was on TV and he always gave me creepy vibes. But because of all of his charity work he was able to convince people that he was a really good guy who genuinely cared about people.
    Even the premise of his most famous show 'Jim'll Fix It' was that Savile would make wishes come true for children and deserving people.
    But it was all a big part of his cover of convincing people that he was just a harmless eccentric.
    He was knighted not just by the Queen but also got a knighthood from the Catholic Church (I can see the jokes coming about that).
    The sad thing is that people in power knew what he was doing and did nothing.
    When it all came out it after Savile's death it was revealed that the BBC where he had worked for years knew everything that went on but covered it up.
    The real tragedy is that the British establishment let his victims down in such a big way and that they never got justice.

  • @1954real
    @1954real Před 2 lety +4

    Vile person, thankyou for reviewing this I've never seen this documentary till now x

  • @alanprice7584
    @alanprice7584 Před 2 lety +4

    Seville had too many friends in high places, it made him untouchable while he was alive.

  • @priscathomas7319
    @priscathomas7319 Před 2 lety +7

    Judges were involved too, this was huge.

  • @stemcg44
    @stemcg44 Před 2 lety +2

    Good Morning from the UK Ashley, this was very moving and I have to agree with you. If that first family had not accepted a cash bribe to stay quiet, then history may have turned out differently. Keep up the good work Ashley love your work, x

    • @ampersandcastle1091
      @ampersandcastle1091 Před 2 lety +1

      Yes but I think we have to bear in mind just how difficult pursuing the legal case would have been for the victims. I don’t think we can blame already traumatised individuals for not wanting their trauma dragged up and scrutinised publicly. Taking money may have been the only option with minimal further distress and still some sense of retribution

  • @outlawking4106
    @outlawking4106 Před 2 lety +7

    Justice can’t be brought to him but it should be brought to those who took part in these abuse cases and for those who helped cover it up within the hospitals, schools, government, police and the BBC!!!
    I knew you’d find this a hard watch but it’s great your shining a light on the abuse of kids that not only happens in Britain but all over the world by the so called upper class and people with power

  • @thuggie1
    @thuggie1 Před 2 lety +7

    also you noticed how it was an independent commercial TV channel that did this documentary , ITV, BBC and channel 4 who was pushing the guys content for decades just crickets

    • @twig5543
      @twig5543 Před 2 lety +1

      the bbc did have a programme on it that they were going to broadcast (panorama) but he died a couple of days before it was supposed to air. they pulled it and replaced it with a tribute show and that episode of panorama was never aired. it's utterly vile.

  • @tomhirons7475
    @tomhirons7475 Před 2 lety +8

    he was friends with Royalty.

  • @alabama1413
    @alabama1413 Před 2 lety +1

    The sickest of the sick! Predator, abuser, who felt he was above the law. But you’re right, that 1st family taking the money over justice was simply disgusting! ‘Creepy’ does not adequately cover the crimes of this foul human being! 🤬

  • @adelia988
    @adelia988 Před 2 lety +3

    What you don’t seem to comprehend is that children and teens lived a much more sheltered life things weren’t discussed. When I was about nine I had a stalker and it all came ahead when some famous people were visiting our village and the cars were backed up and a man tried to get me in his car and when I wouldn’t the car behind with a woman in it tried to get me in, luckily my sister pulled me out. I cannot say more because the famous people on horseback probably weren’t involved but you never know. Children had no rights at all back then, nobody would believe you. I had a teacher who I witnessed abusing on trips etc but it’s only been in recent years he has been punished. (1970s, early 80s)

  • @markkettlewell7441
    @markkettlewell7441 Před 2 lety +4

    Ashley, they settle because the pain of going through a trial was too much for them to face. Savile could afford the best lawyers and there was no guarantee of a conviction and then they still had to re endure the pain again in public. I can understand why they would take the payoff. The justice system doesn’t serve victims of sexual abuse 😔

  • @gmf121266
    @gmf121266 Před 2 lety +2

    My mum told me to never apply to go on his show "Jim'll fix it" because of rumours she'd heard at the time from someone who had come across him and obviously suspected him of being a paedophile.

  • @captainadams8565
    @captainadams8565 Před 2 lety +2

    My brother's ex wife move to the outskirts of Leeds. She said every shop / store showed a picture of Jimmy Savile and everyone knew him when he died. After the truth came out about him, all the pictures of him disappeared and nobody had heard of him.

  • @jasejj
    @jasejj Před 2 lety +3

    Way back in the early 1960s, my grandmother worked at Tyne Tees Television in Newcastle, the company that gave Savile his break in TV. She wasn't surprised by this; his show was very popular but Savile gave all the staff the creeps even then, and the show was pulled without explanation one week and he never returned. You have to wonder if management got wind of his proclivities and quietly got rid of the problem before it caused embarrassment.

  • @christinepreston8642
    @christinepreston8642 Před 2 lety +7

    Seeing how you came to this topic from football chants, I think it's safe to say that those chants were tame now you know the story!!

  • @draugr7693
    @draugr7693 Před 2 lety +2

    Jimmy Saville is a perfect example of how just because somebody seems nice doesn't mean they are.

  • @teecee1567
    @teecee1567 Před 2 lety +1

    Ashley, at 4:05 you talk about the victims... you are a very caring person to have thought of the victims so early on in the documentary. Thank you.

  • @Howay.Man.Angelica
    @Howay.Man.Angelica Před 2 lety +3

    I think the BBC should have the arse sued off them. It's been proven time and time again the executives knew about what was going on. They actually shipped girls in for him. It was The same for Gary Glitter.

  • @lester1773
    @lester1773 Před 2 lety +4

    Now then, now then, jangle, jangle of jewellery.

  • @stub011
    @stub011 Před 2 lety +1

    I am glad you did this one as important that people see these things so they don’t happen again. As adults we need to be better in our communities and be aware of the fact there are evil people out there. A very sad story that shows how power, corruption and lies exist in society and money can crush almost everything. Take care and let’s all stay vigilant and stand up to protect the vulnerable

  • @worthalook4870
    @worthalook4870 Před 2 lety

    Hope you do more of these shows. Crimes that shook Britain

  • @eddyama1946
    @eddyama1946 Před 2 lety +4

    I'm pretty sure that, long before his death, the author Val Mcdermid based one the villains in her Wire in the Blood books on Saville

  • @PamelaDixon88
    @PamelaDixon88 Před 2 lety +6

    Sorry one of my comments disappeared I think youtube didn’t like it lol x
    I was saying he had so much power and influence even gangsters as friends that victims feared of reprisals if they’d spoke out too

  • @garethfarman9540
    @garethfarman9540 Před 2 lety +1

    I worked at Stoke Mandeville Hospital briefly in 1985. It was well known that he was to be avoided.
    The hospital was where the paraolympics where founded and Saville used that cache to hide his crimes.

  • @jellybean2068
    @jellybean2068 Před 2 lety +2

    There had been rumours about him over many years but because of his celebrity and friendship with members of the British royal family it was kept quite

  • @andrewmohan8371
    @andrewmohan8371 Před 2 lety +3

    You should also watch both Louis Theroux docs on him. First ones from his Louis meets series (made years before the news came out) and he talks to him and the others from a couple years ago recapping on it, parts talking about how he couldn’t see how clear it was

  • @anthonyyarwood4058
    @anthonyyarwood4058 Před 2 lety +8

    The shit BBC new about it and covered it up.

  • @twilightingX
    @twilightingX Před 2 lety +2

    I'm a sexual abuse survivor. I was abused back in those times, in 1980 till 1984 and things where very different back then. Child sexual abuse was never heard of or discussed on tv or on the news. We only ever heard of stranger danger. In fact the first child help line was only set up a couple of years after my abuse came out.
    I also had a lucky escape from Jimmy Savile. But that's another story.

  • @Feral_Bog_Witch
    @Feral_Bog_Witch Před 2 lety +1

    He did not work as a coal miner, he worked as a gatekeeper down the mine. The father of a close friend of my mum's worked with him

  • @samgarrod4781
    @samgarrod4781 Před 2 lety +3

    A very very sad story. can't watch beyond about 10 minutes. Breaks my heart

  • @seeker1432
    @seeker1432 Před 2 lety +7

    There is a lot more about this man I've heard and why he felt protected. It is out there if you look. Supply and demand comes to mind.

    • @daniellenothmann7534
      @daniellenothmann7534 Před 2 lety

      What else have you learned about this man?? Any docs that you would recommend watching?

    • @seeker1432
      @seeker1432 Před 2 lety

      @@daniellenothmann7534 Watch this man's interviews and find how smug he was and felt safe in his knowledge. I have no names to purjer myself with sorry. Just the man's own words and now the truth of him out.

  • @elizabethtrudgill3567
    @elizabethtrudgill3567 Před 2 lety +2

    Something that wasn't mentioned were the medallion and ring that Savil wore often. They contained glass eyes from people who had died at one of the hospitals he worked at. He would volunteer to take the bodies to the morgue and take them when no one was looking. A truly sick man.

  • @rafam122
    @rafam122 Před 2 lety +2

    Loved this video

  • @vermilliongecko
    @vermilliongecko Před 2 lety +4

    It's too easy to say that if the first victims hadn't settled out of court, then he would have been stopped. Rape convictions are extremely low even now; only one rapist in 60 is even charged, let alone convicted, because it's a crime that happens in secret where there are no witnesses. In the 1950's and 60's, rape convictions were even lower. It's statistically unlikely that Jimmy Saville would have been convicted; and with a mindset like his, even a conviction would have not stopped him for long. Sentences for rapists were only a few years, then he'd have been out doing it again. Only death or castration stops people like him. Taking money will have probably seemed like the only justice a victim would get in the 1960's.

    • @Bringon-dw8dx
      @Bringon-dw8dx Před 2 lety +1

      It’s usually the only justice you get now- I mean even this week looks what happened with bill Cosby. Rape is essentially legal

  • @joealyjim3029
    @joealyjim3029 Před 2 lety +4

    It happens all over society and is always covered up or goes unreported. I remember there was also football coaches that did it at major premier league clubs and a case in rotherham where it was immigrants from pakistan.

  • @paulhudson563
    @paulhudson563 Před 2 lety +2

    People knew it was going on but chose to keep quiet, which makes them just as guilty. The BBC protected him.

  • @carolkelly5578
    @carolkelly5578 Před 2 lety

    Your observations and comments are spot on. If only people had refused to be bought off all those years previous!

  • @Megara1989
    @Megara1989 Před 2 lety +4

    Please do more crimes that shook Britain x

  • @markthesarcasticlawstudent

    It's one of the worst examples of a failure of justice in recent times. Thankfully however, as a direct result of this, the British police now take cases of historic abuse, as well as current abuse, much more seriously. I'm a law student here in the UK and that much at least makes me glad. There are still a lot more out there though that need to be put away. Love your videos by the way :-)

  • @kevanwillis4571
    @kevanwillis4571 Před 2 lety +1

    I was told about Jimmy Savile in 1989 by a d.j. friend of mine. He said it was common knowledge in the industry

  • @billybscotland7246
    @billybscotland7246 Před 2 lety +2

    This is shocking and much more widespread than the public knew. Lots of top politicians have been named in allocations since, as well as Prince Andrew.

    • @Bringon-dw8dx
      @Bringon-dw8dx Před 2 lety

      Prince Andrew wasn’t related to the Seville case, he was related to the Epstein in case

    • @billybscotland7246
      @billybscotland7246 Před 2 lety

      @@Bringon-dw8dx I agree, I was just pointing out that a lot of high profile people have been involved in these activities over the years.

  • @keyproductions100
    @keyproductions100 Před 2 lety +4

    Fun fact: Jimmy Saville invented using 2 decks at the same time to overlap tunes so there wasn't any gaps in the tunes, he literally invented DJing LOL

  • @benrichards399
    @benrichards399 Před 2 lety +6

    Should have watched "when louis met jimmy" instead. Mesmeric documentary is that.

  • @christiantang6214
    @christiantang6214 Před 2 lety +1

    The BBC knew exactly what was going on and the police knew exactly what was going on and they did nothing about it. He abused hundreds and hundreds of victims for decades and it only came out about 8 years ago. A couple months after he died there was a one off tribute episode of Jim'll fix it broadcasted as a tribute to Jimmy savile. I watched it recently and it made me feel sick

  • @captvimes
    @captvimes Před 2 lety +2

    I can see why they took the payment. Back then rape cases could very easily go against the women even if the man wasnt famous. The victim was put on trail effectively.