💥This Is How Jimmy Savile Got Away With It!

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  • čas přidán 27. 08. 2024

Komentáře • 7K

  • @TheBehaviorPanel
    @TheBehaviorPanel  Před rokem +108

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    • @FurtiveFool
      @FurtiveFool Před rokem +6

      I am very curious to hear your thoughts on David Grusch, and h is UFO whistleblowing

    • @maranda3764
      @maranda3764 Před rokem +4

      @@FurtiveFool yes me too!! Just finished watching it!

    • @denisemason3611
      @denisemason3611 Před rokem +3

      Hello- last week you were talking about signs of a psychopath. One trait that Chad mentioned was displaying the opposite mood ( ie.. smiling when normally a person might respond with grief). I’m watching the trial of Taylor Shabusiness- and I swear she is smiling or even laughing as they talk about her really gruesome act. Think this lady might be interesting. No posit diagnose of schizophrenia but may be bipolar ( I don’t know if this has been decided.)

    • @gdoe4516
      @gdoe4516 Před rokem +5

      Hoping you will do an analysis of the House of Representatives in regards to UAP/UFOs :)

    • @swardie1
      @swardie1 Před rokem +2

      @@denisemason3611 I was going to ask the same. I've been watching too and she's a piece of work. Would love to know if they think she's faking being fit to be jailed or if they think she has psychosis.

  • @likesmegrub
    @likesmegrub Před rokem +378

    When I was 17 back in 1979, I met Jimmy Savile at Stoke Mandeville Hospital. I was picked to go along with my manager to hand over a check for money we had raised from the company I worked for. We sat in a big circle along with other representatives from different companies that had raised money too. I was the only young girl and when Jimmy Savile came to thank us he pretended to straddle me from the front, held my hand and then licked the palm of my hand. This was in front of everyone and they all laughed as I went red in the face and put my head down. My boss said I was silly and that he was only joking about. That was the mentality back then. I was able to go home and tell my mates what a weirdo Jimmy Savile is but not so for the poor victims that were trapped in the hospital and all the other victims outside from there. Thank heavens there is more awareness now and channels like this are so important. Thank you The behaviour panel.

    • @Curlymcgurk
      @Curlymcgurk Před rokem +66

      I’m sorry he did that on you, while others around you laughed and accepted it. Awful.

    • @wirralsquirrel713
      @wirralsquirrel713 Před rokem +50

      Friend at Uni in the mid 90s grew up near Stoke Mandeville. She said it was well known in the area he was a creep & the nurses would avoid him as he’d try to put his hand up their uniform/dress! Nothing done due to his connections & a national disgrace he was never brought to justice.

    • @likesmegrub
      @likesmegrub Před rokem +33

      @@Curlymcgurk I think people were too scared to say anything because he was such a high figure. He raised money and it made him powerful. Thank you for your kind words but my experience was nothing compared to those that suffered at his hands.

    • @tinamac2380
      @tinamac2380 Před rokem +26

      @likesmegrub -
      Bloody hell. That sounds awful. It was different times. I think if people had been unsettled by what he did, they’d have been too embarrassed to say it, in case they looked like the weirdo with the sick mind. People were much more naive about depraved behaviour back then. But, you’re right, the thought of all those vulnerable people that he had access and is heartbreaking.

    • @Curlymcgurk
      @Curlymcgurk Před rokem +23

      @@likesmegrub all the fundraising truly carries his poison right through the very walls of the hospitals he’s raised millions for. Gosh such a dark force he was.

  • @Jodoi1
    @Jodoi1 Před rokem +71

    My sister did her work experience in the late 80's with the ambulance service and met Savile at the Leeds hospital he frequented. The ambulance driver she was working with basically whisked her away at the earliest opportunity and told her to make sure she was never alone with him.
    They obviously knew what he was about......

    • @hlwhhlwh2351
      @hlwhhlwh2351 Před 9 měsíci +2

      I had forgotten he volunteered as a hospital porter

  • @robotsnthat
    @robotsnthat Před rokem +51

    He used to visit my next door neighbour regularly in the 70s, their Daughter ran his fan club. Either in his Rolls Royce or his van. My mum wouldn't let me out of the house whenever he turned up. Wise woman.

  • @degenerates1971
    @degenerates1971 Před 10 měsíci +44

    My parents would never let me write to the Jim'll Fix It Show, and also never used to let me get a lift home with a school friend's dad, who was later exposed to be a paedophile who abused my friend when she was 5 years old. So Grateful for my Dad"s intuition 🙏🙏🙏 x

    • @helvete983
      @helvete983 Před 10 měsíci +10

      I grew up in Leeds in the 70's my mother would never allow my sister to write into the show. I remember one screaming match because my sister couldn't understand why she wasn't allowed, which ended in my mum tearing the letter up and throwing it on the fire.
      Sadly we all knew of one "dodgy" person you'd never be alone with.

  • @sharonheron7559
    @sharonheron7559 Před rokem +737

    I met Jimmy Saville twice and was interviewed by him once as an 18year old schoolgirl. When I returned from the trip I told my mum that he was a total creep, disingenuous, a liar and nothing like the do-gooder he pretends to be. I was just thankful I was never on my own with him!

    • @NicolaMaxwell
      @NicolaMaxwell Před rokem +55

      So glad you were okay too!!❤ can I ask what made you see him as disingenuous and a liar when you met him?? I always found him so creepy, never liked him!!

    • @sharonheron7559
      @sharonheron7559 Před rokem +108

      @@NicolaMaxwell in his recording studio he was told a disabled man with special needs he knew was wanting to see him. He swore and said he was a bl---y nuisance. When the man came in he was SO rude to him and was glad when he left. As myself and 2 other friends were being interviewed he said to pretend it was live and was a week earlier and that we were at an outdoor broadcast instead of in the BBC studios! As he questioned us he was tickling us and rubbing his hands up and down our backs. He was SO full of himself and ugly both in looks and character. Our young teacher was with us and he referred to her as Teach. She found him creepy too.

    • @betsytucker4788
      @betsytucker4788 Před rokem +41

      You were spot on Sharon - good for you that you saw through him right away.

    • @sambailie4773
      @sambailie4773 Před rokem +37

      You had a lucky escape xx

    • @syzmiktv664
      @syzmiktv664 Před rokem +9

      ​@@benjaminhawthorne1969😅

  • @AdamSmith75th
    @AdamSmith75th Před 10 měsíci +25

    When my grandparents say ‘things were safer in my day. We used to wonder off and have fun. We would go out for the day at age 10-12 and come back in time for tea.’ - Jimmy Savile is a powerful lesson that no time has ever been safe for children to be on their own.

    • @ballyhaunis
      @ballyhaunis Před 10 měsíci +5

      There were plenty of perverts back then.........we ere warned about them and told to stay away from them. They have ALWAYS been around.

    • @thisperson5294
      @thisperson5294 Před 10 měsíci +3

      Parents used to warn us about certain men. And not to go down the back alley behind the shops. AND don't forget Hindley and Brady.
      It was far more dangerous in the 60s and 70s because no one would listen or believe you. We were safer only because there were so few cars on the road.
      Now people deny the extent of child abuse by pretending it's all done by trans people - not, as is the case, nearly always by family members and family friends. "He's a really good guy, known him for year. Stop lying."

    • @irenemorley75
      @irenemorley75 Před 10 měsíci +1

      Back in the day parents didn't educate their children like we do today..... we drill it into them now, people had bigger family's back in the day and parents wanted to get you out from under their feet, you was sent to the park with your brothers and sister to play for the day and like you said home for tea time, people just didn't talk about the Jimmy Savills of the world, it was hushed up.🤮🙄

    • @notyourordinarygran
      @notyourordinarygran Před 10 měsíci

      One of my school friends was taken on her way back to school at lunchtime, she was raped and murdered that afternoon in a local wood. This was 1972.

    • @ballyhaunis
      @ballyhaunis Před 10 měsíci

      Terrible
      @@notyourordinarygran

  • @brightpage1020
    @brightpage1020 Před rokem +497

    I appreciate Mark's sensitivity to Savile's victims by not impersonating him on the air, now that it's known. Mark's a classy guy. That's high value respect.

  • @Madders23
    @Madders23 Před rokem +314

    I never liked the man. I’m totally with you Scott. He’s wasn’t funny and I always thought he was creepy. I couldn’t bear to watch him when he was on tv. He made my skin crawl.

    • @caroleminke6116
      @caroleminke6116 Před rokem +14

      Good gut truth there

    • @paddymcp90
      @paddymcp90 Před rokem +4

      He’s only creepy now because of what we now know. To the naked eye he is relatively chirpy & funny IMO.

    • @foreverlv311
      @foreverlv311 Před rokem +33

      ​@@paddymcp90No he was always creepy to me as a kid, females know a wrong un when we see one. Gut instinct. If someone asked me as a kid if I wanted to go on his show I'd recoil because there was something about him that made me feel icky and years later my mates realised I was right about him..vile🤮 some were fooled but not all of us.

    • @andreaalexander534
      @andreaalexander534 Před rokem +6

      I didn't find him creepy. Just a very corny and unfunny caricature .
      I do object to his part in destroying childhood memories alongside Rolf Harris abd Gary Glitter

    • @quiltygal6981
      @quiltygal6981 Před rokem +12

      ​@@takeiteasy7062lot's of people in the business " knew something" rumours etc but he was so powerfu,l it would be like a 16yr old in their first job making accusations against the CEO. People lost their jobs because they raised doubts about him.

  • @anaccount8474
    @anaccount8474 Před rokem +70

    I hate all the 'he groomed a nation" and 'he hid in plain sight' crap. He got away with it because he was protected at the highest levels of British society.

    • @redpillnibbler4423
      @redpillnibbler4423 Před rokem +10

      Both those statements are true.

    • @DirtyJamesUK
      @DirtyJamesUK Před 10 měsíci +1

      And why was he?
      Because the Royal family, the police force, and many charities that the public rely on like Childline etc are rife with paedophiles. Hell, even the Catholic Church is rife from top to bottom.
      The courts have low sentencing for it too, here in the UK. It's almost the epicentre of paedophilia. It's disgusting. Royalists can no longer hold their heads up.

    • @phoenixrising5088
      @phoenixrising5088 Před 10 měsíci +3

      But he did on both counts.

    • @amarshmuseconcepta6197
      @amarshmuseconcepta6197 Před 4 měsíci

      Yup!
      The Luciferians
      And it's in plain sight, 🧐
      it's the satanic
      *lot/Lotte.*

  • @amyevans9042
    @amyevans9042 Před 11 měsíci +73

    Anyone else get the feeling that the interviewer knows exactly what Jimmy Saville is and has done?

    • @Stranger_Than_Fiction299
      @Stranger_Than_Fiction299 Před 11 měsíci +17

      I saw a documentary where he says exactly that.

    • @mazzid9973
      @mazzid9973 Před 11 měsíci +12

      I think they knew, and the interviewer was trying to trip him up. That's my take, but I definitely think I'm right. 💯👍🇦🇺🇦🇺🦘🪃

    • @phoenixrising5088
      @phoenixrising5088 Před 10 měsíci +4

      Of course he knew but no proof.

    • @tommo9757
      @tommo9757 Před 10 měsíci +6

      It was common knowledge within broadcasting 😡

    • @CarrieOnScreaming64
      @CarrieOnScreaming64 Před 10 měsíci +2

      Yes, absolutely 💯

  • @JB_Fraulein_Kunst
    @JB_Fraulein_Kunst Před rokem +94

    Was anyone else freaked out by him as a child? I remember awlays thinking he looked dirty and unclean to me as a kid.

    • @LisaFransenFVD
      @LisaFransenFVD Před rokem +2

      Legally I'm no child no more and that thing is freaking me out more and more the longer I look at his face.. I first thought this guy was the actor who played Willy Wonka 😅.

    • @rachell7682
      @rachell7682 Před rokem +2

      ​@@LisaFransenFVD interesting cos that is the kind of role he played

    • @estarriol7
      @estarriol7 Před rokem +6

      Yes, to the point where this is going to be a very hard episode for me to watch. He really freaked me out.

    • @lindagraham6981
      @lindagraham6981 Před 10 měsíci +2

      I couldn't watch him on tv... I actually repeatedly moaned to family everytime and for the whole time his Jim will fix it program was on he's creepy and yucky. It was so bad as soon as he came on I would start chanting and quacking yucky...yucky...yuck...yuck.

    • @cryptogee172
      @cryptogee172 Před 10 měsíci +2

      Creepy

  • @Magamomma22245
    @Magamomma22245 Před rokem +23

    1. Ackwardness
    2. Avoidance
    3. Overcompensation
    4.resistance stress
    5. Pacifying gestures
    6. Need for approval

  • @maisonleigh4724
    @maisonleigh4724 Před 11 měsíci +31

    John Lyndon and the Sex Pistols were not allowed back on the BBC for calling out this subhuman monster. Good on John Lydon.

    • @jend80
      @jend80 Před 10 měsíci +1

      that's funny cos I've got them on video performing several songs together in the studio on 90s Top Of The Pops (shown on prime time BBC1)

  • @bencaton1514
    @bencaton1514 Před 11 měsíci +39

    For anyone who doesn’t live in the UK, this guy was not only a predatory child abuser but also a necrophiliac who lived with his own mother’s corpse for a time after she died. I remember hearing a story told by a woman who had been a patient at a mental hospital he was a patron of, back when she was a child. He saw her through the window, locked eyes with her, then just climbed through the window and started sexually abusing her. The guy was truly like something out of a horror film. The fact he was so popular just shows what a deeply weird country this is.

    • @DirtyJamesUK
      @DirtyJamesUK Před 10 měsíci

      Deeply weird. I've just seen a comment saying he was charming and hilarious. I've never laughed at him or liked him. Absolute creep. Same type of people that defend the Royal family. Paedophile enablers. I can't believe it, but England is a haven for paedos. Loose sentencing, whereas in certain countries you can be stoned or run out into the wild for touching children. This country, if you touch enough you get to meet the royal family and be protected by them.

    • @Commentator-tb8ku
      @Commentator-tb8ku Před 10 měsíci +1

      he climbed through a window and started abusing her? Why did she not run away? You don't think the fact she was a mental patient could have something to do with this 'story'? Sounds absolute rubbish to me.

    • @bencaton1514
      @bencaton1514 Před 10 měsíci

      Seems to me to be pretty in keeping with his character as described by many others. @@Commentator-tb8ku

    • @beverleyferguson8942
      @beverleyferguson8942 Před 10 měsíci +3

      @@Commentator-tb8ku Perhaps the girl was incapacitated in someway and couldn’t just “ Run away”

    • @Commentator-tb8ku
      @Commentator-tb8ku Před 10 měsíci

      It is perfectly normal for people to have their loved ones in a coffin in their house for a few days before the funeral. That comment just highlights the exaggeration and ridiculous hysteria regarding savile. As for necrophilia, the investigators have admitted that there is no evidence - only the word of one staff member who could be making it all up for paid interviews.

  • @annastracke8585
    @annastracke8585 Před 11 měsíci +22

    For the life of me, I could never understand what people liked about him, I always found him revolting.

  • @beverlybalfe115
    @beverlybalfe115 Před rokem +19

    Mark, thank you for not imitating him on camera. Class.

  • @williamlauraharris2858
    @williamlauraharris2858 Před rokem +31

    My Irish Granny couldn't stand him. As a small child I always asked her why she wouldn't let me watch Jim'll Fix It - this was in the 1970's. She said she has a bad feeling about him. And she was correct, though she died in 1982 before he was outted.

  • @jeanyv9601
    @jeanyv9601 Před rokem +16

    In the 70s, I knew a nurse who said they were threatened with losing their job if they pursued a complaint against him. They did their best to make sure he wasn’t left alone with any patients, but were powerless because of the level of protection from the management. He even had the police in his pocket.

  • @ant1010
    @ant1010 Před 10 měsíci +32

    A couple of years before Saville died I used to have have a window cleaning round and one of my customers was a retired London cab driver and we would have a chat,and one time I asked him if he ever picked up anyone famous, he reeled off a few names and said some would chat some wouldn't,then out the blue he said,"I picked up jimmy Savile once ,he's nasty " I asked why? He said "He got in and was making small talk and after a while I jokingly said, I don't how you've got the nerve to walk round dressed like you do and making silly noises and he instantly changed,and he leaned into the front and said. "I've got a million quid in the bank and can do what the f k I like,what you got,you're nothing" " and there was silence for the rest rest of the journey . Evil nasty man on many levels.

    • @_RAINBOWSHOES_
      @_RAINBOWSHOES_ Před 10 měsíci +2

      Seemed like a creepy weirdo to me when I was a kid, and he was never cool or down with the kids like he thought he was. It was like watching a cringey old man desperately trying but failing to appear cool and young whenever he was on TV.
      The arrogance of the cretin too, knowing that girls were too scared or intimidated by his fame to say anything against him, he thought he was untouchable.
      Hate hate hate for him. 😡

    • @Benjy9845
      @Benjy9845 Před 10 měsíci

      Why insult him in the first place though?

  • @anjistandrin7511
    @anjistandrin7511 Před rokem +31

    Good one guys 👍
    When I was 18/19 I worked for a Psychiatrist at Broadmoor Hospital (in the mid 70s). One day I took some letters into the Superintendent's office for him to sign and Jimmy Saville was sitting in there. Dr. McGrath introduced him to me and I felt so embarrassed and strange about meeting him I just said "Yes, I've heard all about you." And rushed out the door. I always wondered why I'd been so rude but when it all came out about him I wondered if my 'spidey senses' had picked something up.

  • @jackking5567
    @jackking5567 Před rokem +48

    He didn't run those marathons. Here in Newcastle we witnessed him being driven around to key stages with cameras to be seen running. His life was very fake.

  • @grey2619
    @grey2619 Před rokem +17

    I always remember my dad saying to my mum that he would never trust Saville around his kids, that was around 1977.

    • @formidable38
      @formidable38 Před rokem +2

      I was 11 in 1977 , even at such a young age, he gave me the fuckin creeps! Didnt suprise me in the slightest when it all came out.

    • @grey2619
      @grey2619 Před rokem +1

      @@formidable38 yeah, l was 12, what a creep.

    • @eequalsmc2sqrd59
      @eequalsmc2sqrd59 Před rokem +1

      I often wondered as an under 10 in the 70s - what is he for?

  • @mikepotts2470
    @mikepotts2470 Před rokem +23

    The ‘duping of the British public’ is a myth to reinforce the lack of intervention by the authorities- as someone who grew up in Leeds he was hated there, I witnessed cars swerve to hit him whilst he was jogging, shouts of ‘ nonce’ from passing cars etc. I discussed a joint operation by Leeds social services and west Yorks police during the early to mid 80’s !! There should have been a lot more focus on those who protected him from prosecution!

    • @redpillnibbler4423
      @redpillnibbler4423 Před rokem

      Rotherham.

    • @Commentator-tb8ku
      @Commentator-tb8ku Před 10 měsíci

      Rubbish! When he died thousands lined the streets of Leeds. He was worshipped and adored. Everyone was crying and throwing flowers. He was regarded as a national treasure - so don't go making things up.

    • @mikepotts2470
      @mikepotts2470 Před 10 měsíci +3

      I make nothing up but yes entirely agree there was a huge percentage of folk fooled by him especially older generations

    • @Kaytemplerose
      @Kaytemplerose Před 5 měsíci +1

      @@mikepotts2470 I agree with you, but he certainly fooled the sheeple

  • @debfryer2437
    @debfryer2437 Před rokem +20

    I met Jimmy Savile when I was 12 years old. He lived in Roundhay near the park. I went to Roundhay High School for Girls. We did a sponsored walk to raise money for charity and he came along to help promote it.
    He was walking arm in arm with two girls and as I passed by them he wanted me to join them. I said NO and kept walking. He was obviously peeved and said something denigrating. I felt a horrible feeling about him and kept moving. This happened during his Top of the Pops years in the mid sixties.
    My mother was the head of the records department at Leeds Infirmary and my sister worked there as well. I’m wondering what contact they might have had with him and whether he was ever abusive to them.
    He’s a classic narcissist, possibly the son of a narcissist who controlled him and I’ve often wondered if it was an incestuous relationship. Narcissists suck up to powerful people so that their “light” shines upon them and they demean the humble, lowly, poor and weaker members of society through abuse, contempt, control, gaslighting and fear.
    I know. I’m the daughter of one, granddaughter of one and consequently became the wife of one. I’ve had one or another form of therapy for three decades and I still struggle to have a normal life. I left them all as soon as I could but the damage was done.

    • @MKConnecticut
      @MKConnecticut Před rokem +3

      That’s quite a story- you’re obviously very wise about the subject and probably closer to this than you’d like. Thanks for the comment

    • @bernadettecrawford3656
      @bernadettecrawford3656 Před rokem +3

      God bless you

  • @sputnik1941
    @sputnik1941 Před rokem +19

    I used to watch jim’ll fix it when I was little . My husband told me he wrote a letter to him. He fooled everyone for decades . I saw a clip of him in a hospital with a little girl , she was obviously ill and annoyed with him - he said what did I do to you ? She said everything . Heartbreaking and she’d drawn a picture with him with devil horns .

    • @NicolaMaxwell
      @NicolaMaxwell Před rokem +17

      Johnny Rotten warned people for years about him. No one listened ☹

    • @silvermainecoons3269
      @silvermainecoons3269 Před rokem +2

      @@NicolaMaxwell. Really? I’ve never heard about this part of the story. I’ll have to research it.

    • @Kaytemplerose
      @Kaytemplerose Před 5 měsíci

      @sputnik1941 the devil horns is interesting, he was definitely a satanist

    • @deeperunderstanding7495
      @deeperunderstanding7495 Před 3 měsíci +1

      I saw that video recently. It’s haunting me. That poor girl. He was indeed evil.

  • @hlwhhlwh2351
    @hlwhhlwh2351 Před 10 měsíci +12

    I would never let my children watch Jim'll Fix It, and when they asked why I said he was the creepist unpleasant person on tv and I disliked everything about him. My late brother in law who was in Stoke Mandeville as he was disabled and had met him, said everyone there knew what he was like but the powers that be never listened.

  • @romac9516
    @romac9516 Před 11 měsíci +24

    When I was a kid in the 80s and Saville was on tv, mum would recoil physically from the tv and say he gave her the creeps. So strange now to look back and wonder what anybody found remotely entertaining about him. Great show guys.

    • @hlwhhlwh2351
      @hlwhhlwh2351 Před 9 měsíci +1

      Oh thank goodness I wasn't the only mother. That was my reaction and I told my children he was a creep and repulsive.

  • @Ichneumonxx
    @Ichneumonxx Před rokem +30

    I think the most heartbreaking thing about it all is that every time I watch any video about this monster, there's at least one person who has had a personal "experience" with him in the comments. And it's always gut-wrenching. 500 is really underestimated.

    • @piaauman9020
      @piaauman9020 Před rokem +7

      i agree. it's daunting to even imagine how many it really was.

  • @lindabarrett5631
    @lindabarrett5631 Před rokem +13

    The look in his eyes as he tightly held that cigar between his teeth, he looks like his anger is being held in check.

  • @Katie_Woo
    @Katie_Woo Před rokem +34

    My grandmother despised the man and said he was "a lecherous snake".
    I remember the time he was on a late night panel show and he said 'jokingly' that he was the most feared man in every girls school in England 😮 then he pulled out a repeated line that his case 'comes up next Thursday'- definitely hiding in plain sight

  • @countesscable
    @countesscable Před 11 měsíci +21

    As a girl growing up in the 70’s, it always puzzled me how and why he was on TV as he was creepy and unpleasant. I still cannot understand how he got to be on so many programmes.

    • @DirtyJamesUK
      @DirtyJamesUK Před 10 měsíci +5

      The Royal family, perhaps.
      They loved him.

    • @Commentator-tb8ku
      @Commentator-tb8ku Před 10 měsíci +4

      He was on TV because he was endearing and hilarious. He was like everyone's favourite uncle. He came across as a nice old guy - that is why Prince Charles asked him for advice. He had such great charisma and enchanted everyone.

    • @DirtyJamesUK
      @DirtyJamesUK Před 10 měsíci +4

      @@Commentator-tb8ku people are vetted THOROUGHLY to get into royal circles. Prince Charles liked him because he was a highly prolific paedophile, nothing more, nothing less. Same as Epstein and Ghislaine. Royalists need to open their eyes or be assumed to be the same evil.

    • @fantasyboxing71
      @fantasyboxing71 Před 10 měsíci

      ​@@DirtyJamesUKspot on

    • @toniannsleddon4365
      @toniannsleddon4365 Před 10 měsíci +2

      @@Commentator-tb8ku no he didn't. He was a slimy creep and lots of us saw right through him.

  • @toniannsleddon4365
    @toniannsleddon4365 Před 10 měsíci +16

    I dont think all the British public found him entertaining, there was nothing entertaining or funny about him. As a child and young teenager I found him creepy, insincere, evasive and I always felt he was totally untrustworthy. That opinion never changed throughout my adult hood and when he died I couldnt understand the public outpouring of grief. The man was a creep and made my skin crawl from a very young age and Im so glad I was never unfortunate enough to have met him

  • @beckynelson6786
    @beckynelson6786 Před rokem +26

    As a child and a teen,I always thought there was something very creepy about Saville.He was never a national treasure to me.😅

  • @emmaaustin123
    @emmaaustin123 Před rokem +34

    I clearly told people what about the rape and murder of a young boy from a care home shortly after it happened. I was a child when this happened and I was lucky to escape with my life. The reaction of officials was to give him his own programme a couple of years later called Jim'll fix it. I continued to tell anyone who would listen because, not least that the parents and family of that boy should have been informed of what happened to their child. I told a therapist what happened and was wrongly labelled a child murder and paedophile for having witnessed and being a victim in that incident. Other children died in the same style that had contact with Jimmy Savile. I lost my respect for the British Government and its agencies that knowingly allowed child rape and murder to continue. The fact that it was covered up speaks volumes about the corruption of the British Government. The Government is there to serve the people and I truly believe that the cover up of rape and murder of children, or anyone is serving the people of Britain. The fact that he was part of that murder and it has not been acknowledged to date by the current British Government also speaks volumes. The boy was in care which meant the Government had a responsibility to look after him and promote his welfare. He was between 10 and 12 years old and was taken to his death at a sex party which Mr Jimmy Savile was at, by social workers. I know this to be true because I heard the conversation that took place when they came to take him back to the care home. Also before he died the boy told me that he was in care. He said he had a younger brother. It was not the first rape party he had been taken to. I remain concerned for all children and vulnerable people who are in the care of the British Government. I am only telling you what is true.

    • @sophiarevel6952
      @sophiarevel6952 Před rokem +11

      Thank you for speaking out. You are an excellent person.

    • @carmellewis2466
      @carmellewis2466 Před rokem +7

      Abuse lawyer Richard Scorer represented many of the victims of Jimmy Savile. Mayb e he'd be a good person to tell. x

    • @emmaaustin123
      @emmaaustin123 Před rokem

      @@ellie.l6585 I contacted the Police and my evidence is on camera somewhere. Its the disappeared children that get to me the most. It makes me feel that the world has lost its way. Are child protection services (social services in this country) just a front for a child molesting and murdering industry? Why has this child's death and other deaths been covered up?
      I find myself wondering about the integrity of people that I once admired and thought good. The people allow Government because administration needs to be done for the country to function. I don't think the people have given the Government the right to molest and murder children and innocent people. I can't pretend these things don't happen when I am a witness and almost a victim of such crimes. Who runs the country for the people? Who does Government answer to? Has Government been given too much power? Should the role of Government be redefined? I say this because there hasn't been any acknowledgement of children dying or going missing whilst under the care of the Government. This to me indicates that it is still happening. I find that intolerable and I consider it a gross abuse of power and Government has not been given licence to do such things. Someone needs to speak up and change things. What kind of world are we handing down to our children? We have responsibility for the here and now and also future responsibility.

    • @NicolaMaxwell
      @NicolaMaxwell Před rokem +4

      ❤❤❤❤❤

    • @NanaPsychoville
      @NanaPsychoville Před 10 měsíci +3

      God Bless 🙏you, you remind me of Melanie Shaw bless her too 🪬🙏🫶🏻

  • @claireterry1835
    @claireterry1835 Před 10 měsíci +33

    I’m from the uk. 52. Grew up with js. As a child I always found him creepy and unattractive. Never got the whole amazement about him. As a child I knew he was ‘off’.

    • @Beechgoose1
      @Beechgoose1 Před 10 měsíci +6

      Yeah same here.

    • @caronprickett924
      @caronprickett924 Před 10 měsíci +2

      so did i,a very creepy man.

    • @lindagraham6981
      @lindagraham6981 Před 10 měsíci +2

      Me to, as soon as he came on tv I would start chanting...yucky...yucky...yuck...yuck. Watching him now I'm still repulsed and can't help but start up the chant and I'm in my early 60s now.

    • @CarrieOnScreaming64
      @CarrieOnScreaming64 Před 10 měsíci

      Yep. I'm 59 & from Nottingham. I thought the same

    • @allosaurusfragilis7782
      @allosaurusfragilis7782 Před 10 měsíci

      Absolutely. I also remember jokes going round school about him interfering with patients at Stoke Mandeville, which is pretty unsettling in hindsight.
      I didn't really believe them at the time. My objection was that he seemed to me to be a terrible presenter....stilted, awkward, un funny and weird as hell.
      I wondered how he kept getting jobs.
      I'm still raging at the bbc for covering things up. I resent paying the licence fee because of it. Sickening.

  • @zoefree3950
    @zoefree3950 Před 10 měsíci +13

    What’s most sickening is that there were plenty of people who knew and yet he was pushed higher and higher into the publics lives,allowed to continue with all the tv with children, in hospitals with children…..it’s outrageous that no one has ever been charged, Saville himself and those that allowed him to continue 😡

  • @Curlymcgurk
    @Curlymcgurk Před rokem +14

    If Gregg had of interrogated Saville, he would have annihilated that behaviour in minutes and cornered evil into a confession.

  • @SuzanneO707
    @SuzanneO707 Před rokem +29

    As a kid I was instinctively repelled by this man, his slimey antics and overblown personality. It was hard to avoid him on TV, at one point. I also thought it was the way he sucked up to, and in turn , was courted by powerful people was shady and corrupt.
    I thought he was aggressive physically and verbally, and couldn't believe people liked him and thought he was funny. I felt physically sick when he was pawing teens on Top of the Pops.
    My dad would walk past the TV if he appeared and switch it off, and mumble unrepeatables.
    I'm from Manchester, England. Back in the day when my parents were young, he DJed and ran a dance event, no alcohol served, at Belle Vue, which was an amusement park/zoo just outside Manchester. Bet he did.
    I had the same feelings about a lot of "children's entertainers" and people who shout about their "charity" work. Its amazing how these people weave a spell and victims didn't realize they were taken in until its too late.
    Weirdly enough, Dr Shipman practice was in my hometown, some people genuinely looked up to him and didn't see the red flags, his victims were mostly vunerable older people brought up to respect the "good doctor". It was almost a status symbol to be on his register. I thought he was arrogant and creepy, and the fact he had his own practice apart from actual good doctors was telling. He was called out when he chose a wealthier victim who's daughter worked in Law and another doctor got suspicious. My great Gran who had Alzhiemers, who never liked him, died in an old peoples home and he dealt with the death certificate etc. As a result she is named amongst the possible victims, though it was not proved by the enquiry that he was involved in her death. She was a fine strong woman, and she would have kicked him into the long grass if she had been well.
    The way these people exploit and wreak damage is very disturbing

    • @SuzanneO707
      @SuzanneO707 Před rokem +2

      @@bebelovestoread You had good radar, my friend. Don't know about that one, Mickey's Club wasn't big in the UK.

  • @annastracke5259
    @annastracke5259 Před 4 měsíci +17

    It took me a while to actually click on this video, because the sight of that man makes me physically sick. As a young girl I was in the audience of one of his shows "Jimmy will fix it" and I remember, that even then, instinctively , I felt uneasy about him and over the years I grew absolutely disgusted with him and could not, for the life of me, understand why people liked him.

  • @amarillagriffin7427
    @amarillagriffin7427 Před 10 měsíci +11

    I saw Jimmy saville in the sixties in a garage i was with a boyfriend and saville rambled on about my boyfriend picking me up and putting me over the boyfriends shoulder and running off with me, no intelligent conversation came out of his mouth,i remember Tony Blackburn being interviewed and Tony said you could never have an ordinary conversation with saville,in my mind thats because someone has something to hide.

  • @aaarrrggghhhh
    @aaarrrggghhhh Před rokem +29

    For people outside the UK, who may not know who Jimmy Saville was, he was a DJ and TV personality, mainly family/children's, music programmes and was a former nightclub owner, from the 1960s until he died. When women came forward to expose him it opened up a can of worms, which led to a paedophile ring including BBC executives, musicians, entertainers and senior public figures. He was always considered to be very creepy but being the narcissist he was, he hid behind a persona of charity work and philanthropy and was protected by high ranking police and BBC executives. He was well known for raising money for a spinal injuries hospital called Stoke Mandeville but was later found to have abused patients there. He was a true monster.

    • @TheLeagueOfSteve
      @TheLeagueOfSteve Před rokem

      Interesting that Saville’s direct connections to the monarchy and Conservatives are never mentioned. He said he was above the law because he knew he was. He was protected by ALL of his connections, one way or the other.

    • @philosopherwithin
      @philosopherwithin Před rokem +2

      Thank you. I appreciate the description. So in the US he would be comparable to a Mr. Rogers (a beautiful day in the neighborhood) turned Jeffrey Epstein combo? If nobody had come out until after Epstein’s death? Oh! I get the horror now.

    • @jeremypnet
      @jeremypnet Před rokem +1

      Plenty of people turned a blind eye but “paedophile ring” is overstating the truth.

  • @Soundslikeaplan
    @Soundslikeaplan Před rokem +19

    Thank you for covering this one. I’m British and feels so embarrassed that this creep is associated with our country. I remember watching Jim’ll Fix it as a kid and feeling weirded out anytime he was on the screen. Louis Theroux did a documentary with Saville, it was really quite bizarre. Would love an analysis on that

    • @carolynnilsen9270
      @carolynnilsen9270 Před rokem +3

      Yes definitely a weirded out feeling I used to think so too.

  • @cindygenogram5667
    @cindygenogram5667 Před 8 měsíci +12

    My father already knew - in 1972 - that Savile was a paedophile. Dad prevented me from meeting him despite Savile being just across the road. As an adult, I asked why, and I learned why.

  • @johnrider5701
    @johnrider5701 Před 5 měsíci +14

    I always found him creepy when I was a kid. When i was a teenageer I found him more than a little annoying. Today i feel like throwing up when I see him on screen 🤮

  • @ChiquiTuni
    @ChiquiTuni Před rokem +18

    I love how Mark got to shine in this episode, knowing more about this creep than most Americans.

    • @TheCazz10
      @TheCazz10 Před rokem

      Mark shines in every episode

    • @ChiquiTuni
      @ChiquiTuni Před rokem

      @@TheCazz10 Very true. I love this channel. They’re all easy on the eyes, and really know their stuff!

  • @daisyalice77
    @daisyalice77 Před rokem +57

    John Lydon wasn't scared he called him out before anyone else did.

    • @sallyh7282
      @sallyh7282 Před rokem +8

      Yes true and I believe that's what they meant. Others wouldn't but John did.

    • @MrBoggins1234
      @MrBoggins1234 Před rokem +7

      Yep and the BBC banned him for it. Bent culture.

    • @janeparfitt65
      @janeparfitt65 Před 10 měsíci +3

      How frustrating this pig died before he was jailed. He looked weird, he was weird & I bet Charles nearly died hearing this & how Jim couldn't fix his marriage because he's still with Parker Bowles before, during & after his marriage. to poor Diana. That's real scum for you.

    • @matlockmeat
      @matlockmeat Před 10 měsíci +1

      ​@janeparfitt65 Charles absolutely knew what Jimmy was like. Birds of a feather flock together.

    • @janeparfitt65
      @janeparfitt65 Před 10 měsíci

      @matlockmeat yep then you have Andrew, another one of the flock.

  • @TaraBodhi1
    @TaraBodhi1 Před rokem +19

    I can't believe you guys missed he is sending threats to his victims, 'dont grass', 'keep secrets', 'dont want to die young' etc etc etc, the threats are blatant throughout Evil man

  • @LisaMischke
    @LisaMischke Před 11 měsíci +11

    On Savile's gravestone was the inscription: 'It Was Good While it Lasted' (The gravestone no longer exists). A true monster that knew exactly what he was doing and enjoyed it. If he hadn't had so many enablers and protectors in high ranks during his lifetime, none of this would have been possible.

  • @tinamac2380
    @tinamac2380 Před rokem +19

    Savile raised £millions for charity over the decades, but he wasn’t well-liked by a lot of the public. There was always something about him that you couldn’t quite put your finger on. At the same time, no-one suspected the horror that he inflicted, but, there was something sleazy about him, something dishonest, something untrustworthy about him. I’ve never seen him give a straight answer to a question. Even talking about sick children, there was always a smirk on his face. His demeanour never ever matched his role as a ‘charity’ worker raising funds for the needy. I hope he’s burning in hell.

    • @mzliberty7647
      @mzliberty7647 Před rokem +4

      .. trust those 'gut feelings' .. they are related to our instincts...
      we have instincts for a reason .. lol, in my opinion.

  • @reneegudjon3204
    @reneegudjon3204 Před rokem +14

    Nobody can convince me they knew nothing.

  • @tonyboswell5414
    @tonyboswell5414 Před 10 měsíci +12

    We have to constantly discuss these monsters so that modern day Savile’s can be recognised reported and caught, they’re still out there

  • @alansmith8195
    @alansmith8195 Před rokem +14

    It was notable that after the stories broke, so many people said they always thought he was creepy... But very few said the same thing when he was alive.
    I also find it noticeable that a bloke with an unusual blonde haircut, a huge ability to promote themselves and gain power. Sounds and appears very similar to some current and notable politicians

    • @LSMH528Hz
      @LSMH528Hz Před rokem +1

      johnny rotten told the world but he was shut up.
      I wonder why nobody asked questions. It's on the boomers shoulders.
      you know, the boomers with their perverted sex lives...
      They just wanted a part of the action I guess...

  • @VicketyVick
    @VicketyVick Před rokem +14

    The thing with the secretary: she genuinely didn't know he was up to anything nefarious. What he was worried about is she might innocently mention him being alone with children etc because she saw nothing wrong with it. She might have said something like, 'what you don't know is that he personally takes children under his wing' and that sort of thing

  • @jodieaston5600
    @jodieaston5600 Před rokem +18

    He used to travel on the trains that I used to work on, he was always trying to grope the females and always passed it off as joking around. I once told him to remove his hand from my leg and he flashed the most evil look ive ever seen. I dont think many people ever told him or were capable of saying no.
    Horrific man

  • @danh5637
    @danh5637 Před 5 měsíci +16

    “My beastly way” another way of saying rape

  • @MT-tx7bu
    @MT-tx7bu Před 2 měsíci +10

    Today, we call that personality, Narcissism.

  • @Alex-dz2et
    @Alex-dz2et Před rokem +73

    Johnny Rotten called him out and was banned from the BBC

    • @Lemonbonbon
      @Lemonbonbon Před rokem +26

      He did, and they didnt like it at all! The BBC has a lot to answer for.

    • @bernadettecrawford3656
      @bernadettecrawford3656 Před rokem +10

      Johnny spoke the truth

    • @Lemonbonbon
      @Lemonbonbon Před rokem +12

      @@bernadettecrawford3656 its all too common in life that the truth speaker is villafied while the liar is protected for an easy life.

    • @robertwalker951
      @robertwalker951 Před 10 měsíci +5

      Shame on the BBC they tried to hide it all

    • @sharonbland9061
      @sharonbland9061 Před 10 měsíci +1

      Even now the BBC cover up just look at Scofield. Time we got rid of the BBC

  • @cryptokev1759
    @cryptokev1759 Před rokem +11

    It was a crime Jim was never prosecuted publicly while he was still alive. A monster in plain site.

    • @michellemcmanus2729
      @michellemcmanus2729 Před rokem +2

      He was protected until his death because of what he knew about others

  • @Godzillalovesbunnies
    @Godzillalovesbunnies Před 2 měsíci +14

    Now that all his crimes came out it is absolutely chilling to watch him now

  • @gayefosh4530
    @gayefosh4530 Před 11 měsíci +26

    Scott you hit the nail on the head. He's creepy and not funny. He's abhorrent. I felt like this for years, way before all the stuff came out. I just couldn't bear to watch him. He raised millions for charity and that's probably why no one questioned anything. I can't believe watching these videos how obvious it was though. 😮

  • @ralsharp6013
    @ralsharp6013 Před rokem +47

    Johnny Rotten tried to expose these predators in public, it cost him work😢😢

  • @katfromthekong414
    @katfromthekong414 Před rokem +19

    The thought of Jimmy Savile and Rolf Harris touring a psychiatric children's hospital together is going to give me nightmares 🤮

    • @briancohenthepfjmassive.4769
      @briancohenthepfjmassive.4769 Před rokem

      Broadmoor isn't a child's ward. It's for the criminal insane. Peter Sutcliffe and Charles Bronson being two of its ex patients/inmates

  • @wjw8417
    @wjw8417 Před 9 měsíci +18

    I think Andrew Neil had an idea what was going on. He just couldnt fully confront him

    • @carolynellis387
      @carolynellis387 Před 9 měsíci +5

      He did fo a very good interview with Saville
      I think Saville started to become uncomfortable

  • @ms73sp
    @ms73sp Před 8 měsíci +9

    There is one organisation that refused to have anything to do with him and that was Children in Need.

  • @alisonhewitt1753
    @alisonhewitt1753 Před rokem +16

    He is the reason I’m here. To get more understanding and education.
    I worked in one of the places he abused. We knew there was something very wrong with him but we didn’t know what it was. We had no knowledge or power.
    He damaged so many lives.

    • @vee_tinymoose
      @vee_tinymoose Před rokem +2

      Thank you for doing this work to learn and gain skills for future situations. I’m so sorry you had the experience of being in those spaces at the same time as him

  • @melanienagy6389
    @melanienagy6389 Před rokem +46

    Shame he wasn't exposed before he died. He ruined a lot of innocent lives.

    • @paddingtonsnare987
      @paddingtonsnare987 Před 11 měsíci +1

      He was connected with too many powerful people. It's no wonder he wasn't outed. Same goes for politicians etc. Only after death. Bare in mind he was one of the only people that could freely mince about in royal quarters. Quite disturbing, especially when you realise the great many people that support the royals 💀

    • @shanehutchinson785
      @shanehutchinson785 Před 10 měsíci

      Evidence?

    • @erzsebethyoung
      @erzsebethyoung Před 10 měsíci

      ​@@paddingtonsnare987... When Jimmy was still alive a blogger made a comment saying:-
      Jimmy's mother was the illegitimate child of his grandmother and a member of the Royal Family, not sure if he mentioned who the Royal was, and it is the reason Jimmy referred to his Mother as Duchess. "
      Perhaps the Royal family were aware of it, but they preferred to acknowledge him as doing Charity work.

    • @paddingtonsnare987
      @paddingtonsnare987 Před 10 měsíci

      @@erzsebethyoung interesting. I might of heard that somewhere else also. Who knows the truth on that one. The charity work is a fact of course, but also a front I imagine.

    • @bonniehare2372
      @bonniehare2372 Před 10 měsíci

      He was exposed before he died.

  • @dondamon4669
    @dondamon4669 Před 2 měsíci +13

    I don't know how Stephen fry is allowed to talk about underage boys in his book and how 13 is the perfect age? Being gay shouldn't make a difference!!

    • @rosieleat6868
      @rosieleat6868 Před 2 měsíci +4

      what?!

    • @pppp67567
      @pppp67567 Před 2 měsíci +1

      Is this really the case? No way, I'll have to fact check this.

    • @flickingbollocks5542
      @flickingbollocks5542 Před 2 měsíci +2

      Please show where you saw that?
      What did he actually say?

  • @1234holdsworth
    @1234holdsworth Před 10 měsíci +12

    You can tell the man interviewing Saville heard those rumours hes not convinced at all savile knows that and it shows .

  • @CriticalThinkIt
    @CriticalThinkIt Před rokem +15

    My dad always said Saville was a “wrong un”! Never liked us kids watching this monster on TV. My dad was right!
    He was a monster!

  • @heidisymonds4382
    @heidisymonds4382 Před rokem +16

    Marc, the public brought into what the media sold to us about him.
    I was a 9-10 year old girl who met him at a Marines Open day at Lympstone, (you'll know where that is) he was there as a celeb, people were around him asking for autographs, he grabbed me and was cuddling me, luckily my friends grandfather realised it was weird unwanted behaviour and pulled me away and we walked away without them saying anything apart from it was too crowded., but I'm sure they were upset and freaked out by the way he grabbed me.
    Of course years later I realised what it was all about and I am so grateful for those lovely grandparents of my friend Charlotte

    • @lynleebossard6417
      @lynleebossard6417 Před rokem

      Kudos to those grandparents for having watchful eyes & also picking up on the fact that you were uncomfortable. That last part is just as important as the first.

  • @Onmysheet
    @Onmysheet Před 2 měsíci +11

    Savile just shows what a complete joke the British establishment really is. He knew where the dirt was and used blackmail on them. As if to say, "Dob me in and you're going down with me"

  • @philippabaker1078
    @philippabaker1078 Před 10 měsíci +11

    I am English and he was on television when I was growing up. I never saw the appeal and always found him creepy. I never understood why but I absolutely knew there was something wrong with his behaviour.

    • @erzsebethyoung
      @erzsebethyoung Před 10 měsíci +1

      @philippabaker1078 ... Apparently his grandmother had an affair with a member of a British Royal Family hence why he referred to his Mother as Duchess.

  • @NicolaMaxwell
    @NicolaMaxwell Před rokem +15

    John Lydon tried to tell people about this monster in the 80s or 90s. He was ignored as the crazy singer Johnny Rotten from The Sex Pistols.

  • @lucyssilverlining5396
    @lucyssilverlining5396 Před rokem +22

    I couldn't stand this man, he was extremely weird and creepy. When the "revelations" came out my response was..... Anyone who claimed not to know what he was like is lying. It does NOT take a behaviour expert to know that there is something twisted and evil about him. People should be ashamed of themselves for allowing this monster to get away with what he did. Disgusting. Absolutely disgusting. I have never wanted hell to exist more.

  • @sallyford-fitzwilliams1724

    My mother was sent to interview Savile as a young detective in the 60's. She said he sat in his club in Leeds sipping milk and he was "the nicest fella she'd ever met." Great police work, so!!

  • @davecanly7535
    @davecanly7535 Před 10 měsíci +12

    Edwina currie gave Saville a job at Broadmoor... Why isn't currie accountable

    • @kevinbetsy-w9424
      @kevinbetsy-w9424 Před 10 měsíci +1

      We have to given a reasonable response the evil monstrosity that savile was and the fact he'll never face justice. If Currie did not know about the crimes he was committing then how can we condemn her. Perhaps she was naieve given the rumours, but its possible we look up to people today that are monsters yet to be unmasked. People thought Bill Clinton was a good guy until he was outed as a sex pest.

    • @Woodman-Spare-that-tree
      @Woodman-Spare-that-tree Před měsícem

      @@kevinbetsy-w9424. Everyone knew! Also, Savile had no qualifications and no right to copy the keys.

  • @jimrockford2335
    @jimrockford2335 Před rokem +15

    Even without knowing about his crimes, he just comes across as an enormously unpleasant man.

    • @kathynicholson103
      @kathynicholson103 Před rokem +3

      I'm American, so I never heard of him until I saw a news show about his life towards the end of his life. I found him annoying and foolish more than creepy, but I couldn't understand why people loved him so much. I would imagine all the charity worked helped.

  • @claresmith-hill9417
    @claresmith-hill9417 Před rokem +17

    I thank God everyday that when he stood outside the ladies toilets at York Racecourse when Pope John Paul II visited the UK, I was 14 years old, I'm holding the hand of my 6 year old cousin. Saville asked us if we'd like a personal meeting with the Pope.
    Jimmy Saville was the most popular entertainer on the telly but he creeped me out. I said no thank you as my little cousin begged me to go with Jim.
    I've not been very successful in my creepy scary bloke censor in grown up life but thank God I saved my beautiful little cousin and myself from an abuser through and through

  • @TardyGater73
    @TardyGater73 Před 10 měsíci +14

    I remember the first time I saw him back in the nineteen sixties. He made my flesh crawl. I never understood why he was popular. I was in my early teens and couldn't say why he disgusted me as he did. I think it points to body language as being an instinct for some young people.

    • @mrg1956
      @mrg1956 Před 10 měsíci +4

      It amazes me how many women say this same thing. I was am American student in the UK when I saw him on telly the first time. He quite literally scared me! There was something so indescribably evil and creepy about him. Never understood his appeal at all. He did what he did in charity to try to buy his absolution at the end. I don't believe he had an inch of altruism in his soul.

    • @helvete983
      @helvete983 Před 10 měsíci +2

      He was lucky enough to be on the radio in arguably the heyday of Radio Luxembourg. At the time it was few of the outlets to listen to more modern music and as such the DJ's on that station because huge celebrities.

  • @maccoll3644
    @maccoll3644 Před 11 měsíci +9

    Many years ago, when Saville used to appear on tv with over-bleached hair in a frizzy perm with no particular style or cut, I always used to think, "Why on earth is he allowed on the tv, he's obviously very odd!"

  • @S-T-E-V-E
    @S-T-E-V-E Před rokem +16

    Most of the British public hated this guy, he used Charity work to gain power and access to vulnerable people while most people asked themselves why is this guy famous?

  • @TheGsjoberg
    @TheGsjoberg Před rokem +16

    He might be the creepiest human being I’ve ever seen. Not one sincere bone in his body.

  • @grizzlybear4
    @grizzlybear4 Před 10 měsíci +12

    Interesting that his only real relationship was with his Mummy. After he kicked the bucket it came out that he preseved Mummy's bedroom as a shrine to her.
    The Bates Motel.

  • @jacquelinetaylor8683
    @jacquelinetaylor8683 Před 10 měsíci +10

    I could never stand him. He made my skin crawl. He was far too touchy feely with people, just creepy. I wasnt surprised when the truth came out.

  • @Cat-qo3ht
    @Cat-qo3ht Před rokem +16

    He's like that creepy uncle that gives young girls (and maybe boys) that gut instinct that says, "this person is dangerous".

  • @aq9714
    @aq9714 Před rokem +28

    Jimmy Saville, always gave me the creeps. I could never listen, watch or give him any time. I always thought this guy is too creepy and I wondered about who he really was. I just had a gut feeling about him and when he was exposed I was sorry he was dead, he should have been made to face us for what he did. Mark you are right, cigar is definitely a status symbol in the UK. My friend when he arrived from Liverpool in Toronto in the 60's the first thing he noticed was the man selling newspapers on the street was smoking a cigar, he knew that he could make a living here and soon buy himself a cigar. Only the upper class smoked cigars back home.

  • @patriciahanvey286
    @patriciahanvey286 Před rokem +12

    As a teenager in the 60s/70s , I never liked him but didn't know why.

    • @user-xe2mo4fm2h
      @user-xe2mo4fm2h Před rokem +1

      My brother had a Garry Glitter poster on the wall which faced me directly with that horrific wild eyed stare. I couldnt sleep for a good part of a week before it was agreed to take it down. I guess I had good nonce-sense.

  • @pappaprosjektet
    @pappaprosjektet Před 2 měsíci +11

    He was afraid of death. Terrified for ending in hell for all the abuse. That is why J'll fix it started. He was obsessed of giving publicly " something good" Manipulating psyco, if you ask me. Sadist.

  • @ln3804
    @ln3804 Před rokem +18

    Anyone who had any knowledge of Saville knew what he was. He got away with it for decades how??
    As a young teenager I went to the Mecca in Leeds on a -specially for young teens - Saturday afternoon dance session.He was the manager. He preyed on young girls and chose a victim every day each time the Mecca opened. He watched the girls dance and picked his victim. He would invite them to go into his office to see his awards and mementos of his meeting with Elvis.
    He then assaulted them. He did it one Saturday afternoon to a 14 year old school friend of mine who was so ashamed and traumatised she dare not tell her parents. She told us at school in confidence in floods of tears . Just horrific. A monster.

  • @janicelawson7518
    @janicelawson7518 Před rokem +15

    I’m a Brit and saw a lot of Jimmy Saville, I always thought he was a creep, horrible, nasty, scary etc etc etc.

    • @Theroadlesstaken
      @Theroadlesstaken Před rokem +1

      I’m a Brit too & he always gave me the creeps. I felt something was distinctly off about him but could never put my finger on it.

  • @janetfitzgerald9752
    @janetfitzgerald9752 Před rokem +9

    It’s interesting how he was so closely associated with the Royal family, almost as one of them. Interesting too, how media ignores that connection.

    • @redpillnibbler4423
      @redpillnibbler4423 Před rokem +3

      The royal family arn’t what people think they are.

    • @zepps88
      @zepps88 Před rokem +2

      The royal family is full of rapists and abusers. Look at Prince Andrew's connection to Jeffrey Epstein.

  • @annaharvey8729
    @annaharvey8729 Před 2 měsíci +12

    I was young when Saville was at the top of his game. And he always gave me the creeps and the impression that he was a dirty old man and a pervert.

    • @desireeretiree
      @desireeretiree Před měsícem +1

      Ditto, 15,16 in 1970-71 and I could spot it a mile away.... CREEP🙄

  • @johnbones261
    @johnbones261 Před rokem +14

    This man was always a creep, as my grandmother used to say about him, "I wouldn't trust him with the dog ". She was in her 80's then and she could see through him.

    • @Englishroserebecca
      @Englishroserebecca Před rokem

      I’ve read so many posts where people have said their Grandmothers wouldn’t say a good word about him and not let them watch him on TV. With age comes great wisdom and intuition. How so many people admired him was always beyond me. My mother in law always said she thought he was so good always in the hospitals. I thought he was an absolute creep who was hiding something and would never have a normal conversation with anyone. There was nothing decent or honest about the man. Audiences would roar laughing at his jokes and his ways. How were they not creeped out by him I’ll never know.

  • @stoicepictetus833
    @stoicepictetus833 Před rokem +13

    Equally enthralled and nauseated at the thought of analysing this monster of a human being. Thank you for doing this, much appreciated... you guys are 👍!

  • @neil364
    @neil364 Před 10 měsíci +15

    Nobody really thought he was funny. He wasn't a comedian. Nobody i knew thought he was anything but creepy

  • @k1dn1ce76
    @k1dn1ce76 Před 11 měsíci +15

    It's always been so obvious to me even when I was young that there's something VERY off about him and his general presence. I've never understood why no one could ever see it. Eccentric? Yes. Creepy as all hell? Definitely...

  • @kateaye3506
    @kateaye3506 Před rokem +21

    I am an Aspie and all my life I've been able to sense unsavoury characters very quickly. This guy oozed creepiness from the first time I ever saw a picture of him. Neurotypicals tend to dismiss my assessment of others, but I end up being right.

    • @prof.mommyarty
      @prof.mommyarty Před rokem +4

      I'm slightly on the spectrum as well as having a neurological disorder and I get the same thing. Couldn't look at him in the 70's, can't look at him now. I think of it as instinct but your idea if it being a none typical neurotype is extremely interesting.

    • @kateaye3506
      @kateaye3506 Před rokem +2

      @@prof.mommyarty It is more that I find it very difficult to lie and pretend. I'd make a lousy actress! If I get heebie jeebies from someone, I cannot hide my feelings and act as if that person does not bother me. It IS instinct and not neurodivergent, as such, but my response is driven by my Aspie traits.

    • @prof.mommyarty
      @prof.mommyarty Před rokem +3

      Lol I'm a little like that, can't lie to save my life. I gave up when I was young plus couldn't cope with hiding a guilty secret so just went to my parents with "done something". Now it's just " never guess what I did this time"🤦. We have a few different neurological conditions in our family, including my son in law so the whole are fascinates me. Hope you have good coping mechanisms and support network 🙏

  • @LaVidayElTristeFinal
    @LaVidayElTristeFinal Před rokem +15

    Saville got an IQ test and his IQ was between 148 and 151. That’s top 1%, almost genius level. No wonder he was so good at manipulation. He knew fame and power protected him. And his main tactic when he was threatened was to turn the tables and threaten the other person, in many different ways. When he owned clubs, his minions would beat people up. When he was on TV, he’d threaten people with lawsuits. He threatens his secretary: "secretaries should be secretarying, not grassing on their bosses; she should be scared, nobody likes to die young". And when his friend talks about Norma, he makes a not so subtle threat to this (married) friend: “I know things about you, you are married, and I can get you in trouble too”. Even when he was sometimes asked about going to heaven, he would say that if St. Peter denied him entrance, he would threaten to break his fingers. Behind his ridiculous demeanor, he had a very ominous and menacing tone.

    • @julienewell5230
      @julienewell5230 Před rokem

      I think you'll find that a lot of serial killers have a high IQ

  • @andyfagan2136
    @andyfagan2136 Před 3 měsíci +15

    This is one that I can't watch again. The guy makes me wanna puke.