Home › Forums › Chat Forum › Oh FFS….. Really ?!
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Oh FFS….. Really ?!
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1Cougar2Free Member
Yes I am. Presumably you can’t explain it hence your comment.
Well, if you are being genuine then you’ve begged the question. You’ve asked why people have “complained to the BBC” with no further detail that anyone has complained to the BBC. Who complained? When?
BBC News has done some digging after they got wind of it because, hey, remember when journalists undertook investigations? But that’s a gulf from someone filing a formal complaint.
Is there any evidence beyond he said she said to support that statement. Or are you just assuming he is guilty. I have no idea if he is guilty or not.
After the story broke he took to the Internet boasting that there were “only” 13 complaints made about him. Now I’m happy to concede that someone might had gone down the “he said she said” route to make baseless claims in order to try and squeeze out a payoff. But, generously, 13 is 12 too many.
All I’m suggesting is we wait to see what the outcome of the investigations are rather than sack him
He hasn’t been sacked. He has “stepped aside.”
polyFree Member@chrismac – if a court is the right place to resolve this, then the police not the production company might have been a more appropriate point to complain to. But most of the stuff I’ve heard suggested, nobody is suggesting illegality. That doesn’t mean it is ok, and it’s irrelevant right now whether he did or didn’t do most of it – he’s essentially unemployable as a presenter on mainstream entertainment, especially after how he chose to response to the claims.
robertajobbFull MemberHe’ll turn up with Reet Smugg and Farridge on Gutteral Bollox Naturally
1ads678Full MemberIt’s hard to believe that, in 20 years of straying over the being an out of order prat line fairly regularly, no one ever said “Err, Gregg, that’s a bit too close to the knuckle old chap”
His reply would probably have been something like:
“That’s what the wife said!!…”
6thisisnotaspoonFree MemberWhat one? He’s had 4…
To go though one divorce is unfortunate, to go through three is context?
2chakapingFull MemberNot trying to derail the conversation, but struck by the number of column inches dedicated to GW, versus the almost total non-mention of Conor Mcgregor’s (civil) conviction for a very serious sexual assault.
It’s a fair question, and my interpretation is that we already knew CMG was a very nasty piece of work. The story did get reported and he didn’t put out a video blaming the victim (happy to be corrected if he did). I’ve also yesterday read a thought piece about his “fall from grace”. Oh, and he’s from the RoI.
GW is a UK household name, was still admired by many (see the OP here) and has gone full Partridge in his response. A big part of the news is what’s novel, and this is quite novel.
4Harry_the_SpiderFull MemberIdea for a TV show.
Put Wallace, and all of the other “celebrity” undesirables, on an island in the Antarctic and leave them there.
Call it Nonce Island.
fasthaggisFull MemberNow Harry,don’t be coy.
You were really thinking more Battle Royale 😉
4Harry_the_SpiderFull MemberNope.
Show would be 4 minutes long. Celebrity Nonces stood on an ice covered volcanic beach with a box of MRE and bivi bags. Footage taken from a drone as it goes back to the ship. Credits, including a list of all of the people that they have abused. End.
Theme tune would be “Don’t get mad, get even” by The Age of Chance.
fasthaggisFull MemberDamn, so no weaponised combine harvesters..
Is dissapoint. 🙂
chrismacFull MemberBBC News has done some digging after they got wind of it because, hey, remember when journalists undertook investigations? But that’s a gulf from someone filing a formal complaint.
I do remember when this happened and journalists were honourable people who investigated stories and allegations. They worked hard to seek out the evidence to support or refute those allegations. They would interview those making the allegations and those who were accused and publish well thought out news stories and programmes. What we have now, and not just this story, is trial by social media and the press with none of this investigation and corroborating of facts that used to be the hallmark of good journalism.
2Mister-PFree Member“Put Wallace, and all of the other “celebrity” undesirables, on an island in the Antarctic and leave them there.
Call it Nonce Island.”
Not defending GW in any way, but nothing so far paints him as a “nonce”.
flickerFree MemberWhy don’t celebs who get caught out like this ever apologise??
I mean a genuine apology rather than one of those faux “sorry if you were offended” type ones.
Some do, Ant McPartlin **** up, apologised and booked himself into rehab.
I think it comes down to being a decent person rather than an obnoxious bell end though.
kelvinFull Membernone of this investigation and corroborating of facts that used to be the hallmark of good journalism
Rose tinted glasses on there. Journalism failed so many people in the past. The bar was so high that even Saville’s crimes went on without public challenge.
chrismacFull Membert. The bar was so high that even Saville’s crimes went on without public challenge.
True. It he did have the support of prime ministers and the royal family which helped him bury the story.
2scruff9252Full MemberIdea for a TV show.
Put Wallace, and all of the other “celebrity” undesirables, on an island in the Antarctic and leave them there.
Call it Nonce Island.
wait, what?
So GW makes some ill judged attempts at humour therefore;
a) you think that makes him a nonce
b) you want to watch him be killed, live on tv, in the name of entertainment…?
Give your head a wobble
1scruff9252Full MemberOh, was what you said an ill judged attempt ah humour.
You best be off to nonce island then ?
Harry_the_SpiderFull Memberscruff9252Full Member
Oh, was what you said an ill judged attempt ah humour.You best be off to nonce island then ?
Wow!
And on that note I’m off.
5franksinatraFull MemberWhat we have now, and not just this story, is trial by social media and the press with none of this investigation and corroborating of facts that used to be the hallmark of good journalism.
I don’t think this is the case at all. We have credible people, like Kirsty Wark, raising complaint, many of whom said they followed the formal procedure and nothing was done. You then have Wallace slamming the self destruct button with his ridiculous middle class women of a certain age comment, which basically backed up the suggestion that he is classic 1880’s man. Media have been quick to point out that there has not been any suggestion of illegality and, as of last night, he was still on the tele.
Given the publicly funded BBC’s history of poor management of these types of issues amongst its ‘talent’ before, it is entirely understandable that there is pubic interest.
6Mister-PFree Member“it is entirely understandable that there is pubic interest.”
Typo of the day!
1polyFree MemberI do remember when this happened and journalists were honourable people who investigated stories and allegations. They worked hard to seek out the evidence to support or refute those allegations. They would interview those making the allegations and those who were accused and publish well thought out news stories and programmes. What we have now, and not just this story, is trial by social media and the press with none of this investigation and corroborating of facts that used to be the hallmark of good journalism.
Eh, but thats exactly what happened here. BBC News spent a number of months investigating, corroborating and then believed they had a credible story. They presented their findings to Wallace for comment / rebuttal and he “stepped aside” then went on Social Media to defend himself and made the situation worse. Following which, other claims emerge that seem to reinforce the original allegations. If the claims are entirely fabricated and maleavolant he has the resources to sue for liabel.
1thisisnotaspoonFree MemberThey would interview those making the allegations and those who were accused and publish well thought out news stories and programmes. What we have now, and not just this story, is trial by social media and the press with none of this investigation and corroborating of facts that used to be the hallmark of good journalism.
What more do you actually want? They’ve listed all the allegations with the who, what, where and when. A sit down interview on Newsnight where they can cross-examine the female assistant who he allegedly grabbed her bum?
1dirkpitt74Full MemberHe’ll do a Prince Andrew style car crash interview next….
1polyFree MemberNot trying to derail the conversation, but struck by the number of column inches dedicated to GW, versus the almost total non-mention of Conor Mcgregor’s (civil) conviction for a very serious sexual assault.
I was aware of Conor McGregor’s case, and it did make headlines, however until that happened I’d never heard of him and wouldn’t recognise him. I suspect I’m not unusual – in contrast there won’t be many people who don’t recognise Gregg Wallace’s mug from the telly. The McGregor story also appeared to be finite – there was a certain amount of news about it, but it seemed like only one complainer, and her story was defined in the court room. In contrast once the Wallace story broke various “me too” stories broke along with people reawakening old stories. Many of those people were (minor) celebs themselves which makes the stories more marketable. Then of course McGregor presumably had legal advice saying “don’t say anything, you will ruin any hope of an appeal” and Wallace had a little voice in his head saying, “your cheeky greengrocer personality can dig you out of this” and so he made it so much worse by going on Instagram to “defend” himself.
MoreCashThanDashFull MemberNot defending GW in any way, but nothing so far paints him as a “nonce”.
Careful, we’ve exploded the servers before arguing that definition!
1franksinatraFull MemberHe’ll do a Prince Andrew style car crash interview next….
i would bloody love that. The Andrew interview was one of my all time favourite tv moments. I’d love to see Kirsty Wark, Emily Matlis or Vic Derbyshire tearing him apart.
2johnnersFree MemberVery tricky for Torode – he must be right up there as someone who just stood by and watched Gregg do his stuff, and he’s hardly in a junior role where worries over his career or of being believed could have been a factor.
fenderextenderFree MemberAnyone else notice how Torode often seems to have a bit of a runny nose?
scuttlerFull MemberI’m convinced that Torode and Wallace film mostly separately and so I tend to spend half of an episode distracted looking for shots that they both feature in. So in my feeble mind it’s plausible that Torode didn’t see most of it and yeah when he was there he woulda been preoccupied with his runny nose.
Kryton57Full MemberRe the BBC, they are in the fault line now. A letter from Nestle claiming about behaviour when filming Inside the Factory on thier premises has been surfaced although GW has not been named specifically.
chrismacFull MemberVery tricky for Torode – he must be right up there as someone who just stood by and watched Gregg do his stuff, and he’s hardly in a junior role where worries over his career or of being believed could have been a factor.
You could say the same for Marcus, Monica and in the past Michel Roux when he did professionals. Either none of them saw anything or are part of the problem.
8funkmasterpFull MemberA letter from Nestle claiming about behaviour
**** hell! If Nestle are complaining about you then you must be a right bastard.
1susepicFull MemberFeels like this thread is running out of steam, which is probably a blessing, but contributors might like to read an old review of GW’s culinary highpoints. Didn’t go looking, it turned up on my bluesky feed.
Unearthed review of Gregg Wallace’s ‘travesty’ of a restaurant
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