TV1 min ago
Ambiguous headline?
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Reporters from Newsnight launched a probe into allegations about inappropriate behaviour by the Jim'll Fix It legend towards schoolgirls just days after his death on October 29.
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Ambiguity: admitting more than one interpretation, or explanation; of double meaning, or of several possible meanings; equivocal (the commonest use).
This makes it clear
Just days after his death on October 29 reporters from Newsnight launched a probe into allegations about inappropriate behaviour towards schoolgirls by the Jim'll Fix It legend
Ambiguity: admitting more than one interpretation, or explanation; of double meaning, or of several possible meanings; equivocal (the commonest use).
This makes it clear
Just days after his death on October 29 reporters from Newsnight launched a probe into allegations about inappropriate behaviour towards schoolgirls by the Jim'll Fix It legend
This isn't new news though, people aren't coming forward - this is what was written in a tribute in the Telegraph after his death - he's been the subject of rumour for years:
"Savile always claimed that the key to his success on Jim’ll Fix It was that he actually disliked children, although in later years he maintained that he had offered this explanation to allay any untoward suspicions that he liked them too much. Rumours of under-age sex circulated for some years, although the fact that no allegations of impropriety ever appeared in print seemed to confirm Savile’s own insistence that he had “no past, no nothing”.
"But he was always careful to guard against the possibilities of any misunderstandings, and the predatory intentions of parents or the press. When children knocked on his door for autographs, he would refuse to open it, instead passing the signed photographs and scraps of paper back through the letter box. In later years he even refused to have a computer in his home, explaining that he did not want anybody thinking he was downloading child pornography."
"Savile always claimed that the key to his success on Jim’ll Fix It was that he actually disliked children, although in later years he maintained that he had offered this explanation to allay any untoward suspicions that he liked them too much. Rumours of under-age sex circulated for some years, although the fact that no allegations of impropriety ever appeared in print seemed to confirm Savile’s own insistence that he had “no past, no nothing”.
"But he was always careful to guard against the possibilities of any misunderstandings, and the predatory intentions of parents or the press. When children knocked on his door for autographs, he would refuse to open it, instead passing the signed photographs and scraps of paper back through the letter box. In later years he even refused to have a computer in his home, explaining that he did not want anybody thinking he was downloading child pornography."