I've heard exactly this (from two separate, unconnected employees of a well known airline)
Thank goodness at least one of my evidently carelessly-tossed arrows has hit a deserving target
I've heard exactly this (from two separate, unconnected employees of a well known airline)
Jeremy Beadle...Are you sure ?
Met him a couple of times and a cracking bloke, a quick look on Wiki estimates his total charitable fund raising to be around £100 million...
What do you know you put him on that list ?
Met him at Goodwood Hotel a few times.
He wasn't too bad at all, but The Booby was a witch. Not quite how you'd expect it to be but pretty sure anyone else who met them both would agree.
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Saw him a couple of years ago at Plumpton and he was looking very unwell then so not surprised he has passed away. Prior to that he was promoting a book at Fontwell and wouldn't sign anything that wasn't the book which upset a lot of people.
He was a very good journalist for the old Sporting Life paper and won several awards but his role on the TV was very much him playing up to the TV image. Love him or loathe him he brought something different to the previously cosy racing TV coverage and led a number of campaigns to get better deals for punters.
As for the sexist image, this seems to be driven from the poor reality TV choices he made after he was removed from mainstream TV racing. He tried to play his character and it didn't work for him. To get a better idea, here is a quote from Alice Plunkett on the ATR website this evening talking about how he supported bringing women into the TV racing business:
"“He was just a genuine supporter of young people, women – weirdly. What people saw and what he actually was were a long away apart. He was great to Tanya (Stephenson), he was great to me and I’ll always be so grateful as to how he looked after me when I started out and knew nothing.
“He was a great journalist. He never, ever came to work unprepared. He was such a worker. All that flap and nonsense was one thing, but he turned up every day with so much background work.
“He knew exactly what was going on. In the end he probably became a caricature of himself."
RIP
Met him at Goodwood Hotel a few times.
He wasn't too bad at all, but The Booby was a witch. Not quite how you'd expect it to be but pretty sure anyone else who met them both would agree.
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He didn't look well when he was last on TV and had lost half his weight.
I sat next to your wife at the hairdressers once and we had a lovely chat. She had a Labrador with her who curled up and slept at my feet after I petted him. I had no idea who she was until the hairdresser told me after she left!
Great story bro.
Glad you enjoyed it Aunty
Saw him a couple of years ago at Plumpton and he was looking very unwell then so not surprised he has passed away. Prior to that he was promoting a book at Fontwell and wouldn't sign anything that wasn't the book which upset a lot of people.
He was a very good journalist for the old Sporting Life paper and won several awards but his role on the TV was very much him playing up to the TV image. Love him or loathe him he brought something different to the previously cosy racing TV coverage and led a number of campaigns to get better deals for punters.
As for the sexist image, this seems to be driven from the poor reality TV choices he made after he was removed from mainstream TV racing. He tried to play his character and it didn't work for him. To get a better idea, here is a quote from Alice Plunkett on the ATR website this evening talking about how he supported bringing women into the TV racing business:
"“He was just a genuine supporter of young people, women – weirdly. What people saw and what he actually was were a long away apart. He was great to Tanya (Stephenson), he was great to me and I’ll always be so grateful as to how he looked after me when I started out and knew nothing.
“He was a great journalist. He never, ever came to work unprepared. He was such a worker. All that flap and nonsense was one thing, but he turned up every day with so much background work.
“He knew exactly what was going on. In the end he probably became a caricature of himself."
RIP
I think that's over-reading into my post. My point was that the telly seemed to tolerate 'characters' far too easily in the past, with the subject of this thread being one. I added Savile as an extreme example to illustrate the point that the appointments were somewhat eccentric to say the least, with employers easily dazzled by 'characters' without much regard for their foibles. I was not putting anyone in the one particular bracket occupied by Savile that you seem to infer. As far as the man himself is concerned (Moore) he used his celebrity to promote his views, and there is a difference between being a bit old school and being a political campaigner for a fringe lunatic neo-nazi party (etc etc). Being lovely and polite to white men, and undoubtedly courteous to white women does not make a person beyond criticism.