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Should We Just Let Him Rot?

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sp1814 | 17:31 Tue 03rd Nov 2015 | News
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Do we really need to know any more?

Would you be happier letting your memories of him fade, or do you think there's value in the BBC producing this documentary?

http://www.theguardian.com/media/2015/nov/03/louis-theroux-jimmy-savile-documentary-top-of-the-pops

Personally I'm curious to see how the BBC will deal with their own 'culpability'...will there be a thorough and frank investigation into how the BBC (and by extension, the rest of us) were taken in. So think it's a valid exercise.

What do you think?
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I'm unsure it makes much difference. For example is there only one documentary on Adolf Hitler ? Or Pol Pot ?

I don't think it is really entertainment, but I'd not get het up about another serious investigation. Doubt I'd tune in though.
By giving this documentary another airing, with new material, we might learn how we were all taken in my this monster.

Know thy enemy is a phrase that comes to mind SP.

Let him 'Rot In Peace' he's had enough publicity, good and bad, if the BBC want an investigation, get on with it behind closed doors, just tell us the result, they waste enough of our money as it is!
The man is now dead. He is no longer a threat.If it shows up the cover ups and mindset of the hierachy of the BEEB then licence payer may find out what sort of people their fees go to
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Hmmm - mikey4444, I see what you're saying. I'm thinking that anything of substance would have already come out at YewTree.
Louis Theroux came across in the original as an irritating individual who was very poorly placed to get Savile to open up about anything. His whole attitude had Savile on the defensive from the start.
There's an illuminating scene in the programme where Theroux goes to bed while his cameraman sits up and has an intimate chat with the DJ. In the morning Theroux comes down to find that the cameraman has got more out of his subject simply by sitting down and talking to him as a normal human being, rather than trying to be "Louis Theroux - the man who gets under your skin, but not into your mind"
But did Theroux take the hint? Nope. That's not to say he would have "unmasked" Savile exactly, but it might have been a more interesting programme.
SP...there are plenty of Saviles still abroad in Britain today, practising their evil trade.

Hardly a day goes by when some pillar of society is in Court. I was thinking that if we saw how Savile was clearly able to fool and manipulate so many people, we may be more aware of the methods used and how to spot them in the future.

Savile was able to mislead many thousands of people, over nearly 60 years
and anything that makes it more difficult in the future has got to be worth trying.
Let him rot.

//Know thy enemy is a phrase that comes to mind //

He's not our enemy. He's dead.
I agree with mickey444. Know they enemy.

If we can understand the mind or motivations or how they get away with something like this all the better. Abuse didn't die with Saville. It is alive a kicking in all walks of life.

Louis says he sensed he didn't get to the bottom of his sexual side and he classed him as a friend. So what hope has anyone else? Well I met JS for about 5 minutes in a hotel I was working at and from the minute after I met him made sure I kept the younger girls away from him. I actually went to my manager and said to keep the smitten youngsters away from that dirty old man.

It is the people close to him that ignored those signs and instincts and allowed him to be the way he was.
I met him too, cassa and so did my sister (separately). He invited both of us Togo and look around his office, but he was incredibly slimy.
Sorry Togo.... autocorrect...x
cassa333, I can’t really see what we can learn from continually raking over the coals. We can’t examine his mind – he’s dead. We know he came across as a popular man who did charitable works, we know what he did, we know people were aware of it and we know they ignored it because of who he was. The only thing we can learn – and hopefully we have – is not to ignore it in future.
Regardless of how many documentaries are made about the likes of savile, glitter, jackson etc ... so long as history remembers them for what they are (paedophiles) let the documentary makers get on with it.
Well said retrocop,he only got away with such a lot because of tacit agreement by others, an investigation into those who knew and worked with him would be beneficial.
//we know what he did, we know people were aware of it and we know they ignored it because of who he was.//

do we?

he's dead. he was never arraigned during his lifetime and now he never will be. his guilt or otherwise hasn't been tested in court, nor will it now, ever. many on here criticise those who would not wait to let justice run its course - why is this case so different?
There may be people on this site that's had issues with that pig, their memories that will never be erased, why do these TV comp's keep bringing up reports of something that the Public already know about, let the evil pig rot & lets get on with life.
//do we? //


We do.


//http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/2015/02/26/jimmy-savile-senior-stoke-mandeville-hospital-staff-abuse_n_6758102.html//

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-24564933

wired...I might be wrong here but that investigation is already underway.
mushroom25

//we know what he did, we know people were aware of it and we know they ignored it because of who he was.//

do we?

he's dead. he was never arraigned during his lifetime and now he never will be. his guilt or otherwise hasn't been tested in court, nor will it now, ever. many on here criticise those who would not wait to let justice run its course - why is this case so different?




Is that about savile or jackson?
///he's dead. he was never arraigned during his lifetime and now he never will be. his guilt or otherwise hasn't been tested in court, nor will it now, ever///

At the risk of invoking Godwin's Law.....that could be applied to one A. Hitler.
Sometimes the evidence is so overwhelming that it makes the result of any court-trial a foregone conclusion, although it is always better to have a trial where possible....

I don't think the fascination is necessarily with Savile himself, it's more to do with an environment/culture that enabled him to hide 'in plain sight'....and other people who are accused/suspected of doing the same.

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